Windows 10, unlike 7 and 8, fails to turn off superfetch and it completely breaks on some manufacturer hard drives. My media player PC using a PNY SSD has this and it causes %100 drive load over short periods of time. I found out how to disable all the parts of it and fix it but a wifi issue lead me to swap into windows 8 for a little while. This week I was going to do a reinstall and decided to have it go back to windows 10 again and again I ran into the problem, almost forgetting what the cause was. This was after all the updates had gone through.
How is it that such a performance debilitating issue (it makes movies stutter and breaks games) is not a priority fix? I can only guess it has to do with how many people are still running mechanical drives.
How is it that such a performance debilitating issue (it makes movies stutter and breaks games) is not a priority fix? I can only guess it has to do with how many people are still running mechanical drives.
