You're making a mountain out of a molehill with this stuff... If Windows wasn't enabling TRIM, or it was running defrag on your SSD then you'd have something with some meat here. If you had a fresh Windows install on a high-end SSD and you were seeing *none* of the SSD optimizations handled automatically by Windows, you'd have something.
Superfetch is a speed optimization that has one single downfall: it uses slightly more power by keeping more data in your RAM. How in the world does leaving Superfetch enabled on a system with an SSD hurt your performance or do anything even remotely negative besides the (slightly) higher power draw I just mentioned?
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Windows 7 blog has some very clear information about what Windows does and doesn't do in regards to optimizing itself for an SSD. They found that going too far with optimizations was actually harmful in lots of cases. Therefore Windows doesn't turn on all optimizations for all SSDs.
If you're not installing Windows 7 fresh onto a "good" SSD then all bets are off. If you think you know better how to optimize your system for an SSD than the teams of engineers and testers at Microsoft then have at it (you may be! but enjoy your circa 1998 MS-sucks-paranoia). But you're doing this community a disservice by trying to push this stuff as something all users should be doing. I dare say 99% of users should install fresh, partition their whole SSD, and forget about it.