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SSD



Darren S

ClioSport Club Member
bumping my own question ive old hp laptop which may benefit from a ssd its got remote access to sites printers and other items programs & a user who couldn't deal with a fresh setup & its hassle id like to avoid would cloning carry everything over seamlessly

thanks
Sometimes you have to bite the bullet and go for a clean reformat. If you open a command prompt (Windows key + R and then type cmd) - and run the systeminfo command - it will show you the Original Install Date of the OS. My work's PC is currently reporting 23rd June 2017 and I'll be switching to a larger SSD over the next week or so.

Despite having a lot of setup information, apps installed and various configs - I'm not even thinking of cloning the drive. I'll just start afresh and negate all the build-up of crap that my PC has had in the last eighteen months.
 
Sometimes you have to bite the bullet and go for a clean reformat. If you open a command prompt (Windows key + R and then type cmd) - and run the systeminfo command - it will show you the Original Install Date of the OS. My work's PC is currently reporting 23rd June 2017 and I'll be switching to a larger SSD over the next week or so.

Despite having a lot of setup information, apps installed and various configs - I'm not even thinking of cloning the drive. I'll just start afresh and negate all the build-up of crap that my PC has had in the last eighteen months.
If it were me I'd have done a fresh install but trying to decipher a parent's organisation of a 10 year old I3 3gb laptop isn't going to be fun

Unfortunately I've seen flag for the health of the 500gb HDD (to my amazement) my idea of a cheap 240gb SSD maybe a tight fit space wise [emoji17]
 
Data retention without power is usually rated at a year, but most do longer than this now.
Not really an issue for personal use but if it’s commercial data really needs to be backed up elsewhere.
I am confused as to why it would be lost after X amount of time - surely once it's written it will stay as-is unless it is changed?

By which I mean to ask why a year or so? Why not a day? or a week? It will be the same conditions (no power, no operation) so I don't understand why things would fail after an amount of time.

I haven't read up on the construction/physics, though, so I'm sure I'm not understanding something, lol.
 

Archtronics

ClioSport Club Member
  Clio 182
I am confused as to why it would be lost after X amount of time - surely once it's written it will stay as-is unless it is changed?

By which I mean to ask why a year or so? Why not a day? or a week? It will be the same conditions (no power, no operation) so I don't understand why things would fail after an amount of time.

I haven't read up on the construction/physics, though, so I'm sure I'm not understanding something, lol.

Data isn’t written like on a traditional hard drive,
SSDs store data by using an electrical charge, if it loses that charge then it corrupts the data.

 
Data isn’t written like on a traditional hard drive,
SSDs store data by using an electrical charge, if it loses that charge then it corrupts the data.

Thanks chaps - looks like they should be fine in 'normal' use, but backups should be made to other formats (as always).

One of the joys of modern life, I guess - having to back everything up and move it to the latest formats every so often! lol
 


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