I've been hearing a lot of things about how SSDs are more sensitive and have a lower life, that you can only delete and write so much data before it slows down.
I got my first SSD with a new computer and I had some issues installing Windows 7, I had to install Vista, then do a clean install of 7, before having to reformat and install Vista again, when I was about to enter the Product Key for Vista, I got a error so I had to reformat and install Vista ONCE AGAIN, before installing Windows 7 for the last time.
Have I just done irreversible damage to my SSD? Have I unknowingly made it slower? I don't really have anything to compare it too, and while my boot times are fast, everything else feels more or less the same when I was installing drivers and software like anti-virus. Where do I truly notice the speed?
Have I actually made my SSD slower by doing all these reformats? I have a Intel 510 hooked up to a SATA 6GB/s Intel Connector.
I got my first SSD with a new computer and I had some issues installing Windows 7, I had to install Vista, then do a clean install of 7, before having to reformat and install Vista again, when I was about to enter the Product Key for Vista, I got a error so I had to reformat and install Vista ONCE AGAIN, before installing Windows 7 for the last time.
Have I just done irreversible damage to my SSD? Have I unknowingly made it slower? I don't really have anything to compare it too, and while my boot times are fast, everything else feels more or less the same when I was installing drivers and software like anti-virus. Where do I truly notice the speed?
Have I actually made my SSD slower by doing all these reformats? I have a Intel 510 hooked up to a SATA 6GB/s Intel Connector.