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Simon 2021 年 10 月 9 日 下午 1:07
im a dumb ♥♥♥♥
forget that i ever posted this please
最後修改者:Simon; 2021 年 10 月 10 日 上午 5:43
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my new friend 2021 年 10 月 9 日 下午 1:11 
Reviews from a few sites suggest that drive has an abnormally higher failure rate than others.
Samurai 2021 年 10 月 9 日 下午 1:11 
Yeah no.

Also, paragraphs.
Arokhantos 2021 年 10 月 9 日 下午 1:14 
ofcourse its gonna fail if you repeatly install games and delete them and install new games, ssd has limited write cycles, and if you do not leave enough space open you only write on 1 cell instead of dividing the write cycles among all cells for example causing even faster failure rate even tho you are within the write cycles of the ssd
Simon 2021 年 10 月 9 日 下午 1:23 
引用自 zerokool
ofcourse its gonna fail if you repeatly install games and delete them and install new games, ssd has limited write cycles, and if you do not leave enough space open you only write on 1 cell instead of dividing the write cycles among all cells for example causing even faster failure rate even tho you are within the write cycles of the ssd
THANKS MATE
rawWwRrr 2021 年 10 月 9 日 下午 1:29 
Coincidence does not equal causality. Drives fail.
Garou 2021 年 10 月 9 日 下午 3:58 
Every time you hard reset you risk your ssd.
Overseer 2021 年 10 月 9 日 下午 4:11 
Steam only? That is an argument from ignorance. Just look at all the other things you have mentioned. Especially video recording burns through a lot of data. Steam could have just been the trigger of multiple underlying problems you never noticed.
What was the remaining life and general S.M.A.R.T. data of that SSD?
UberFiend 2021 年 10 月 9 日 下午 4:57 
It's probably the drive. Possibly some other cause. But it's not Steam.

You could boot into Command prompt & try chkdsk or scandsk, or spam F8 on boot & see if you can recover the drive. Another option could be to clear the drive in BIOS & let it rediscover.
MonkehMaster 2021 年 10 月 9 日 下午 9:29 
ignoring past comments (not necessarily in this thread), software can destroy or cause extra wear on hardware (because if done differently or wrong, said software/program can exceed expected specs or designs, ect..) due to coding, how it works and what its making said hardware do, for example, steam likes to force pre-allocation among many other way to download and patch an update or hot fixes, unlike other programs/apps/ect... and that update process does cause double or more extra wear on an ssd when it isnt needed, other examples is software/programs like games... new world for example, pushing hardware (gpus in this case) beyond its specs, causing power spikes and frying said gpus (no mater the devs claims of it not being their fault), also a benchmarking program (dont rememebr the name off hand) caused many issue with hardware as well, there are tons of instances where software/programs have caused issues with hardware.

as for anyone who disagrees with software/programs being able to cause hardware to fail or what ever, im not up for debate on that topic, any in case, claiming it cant is 100% false no matter how you try to spin it, dont let anyone tell you software/programs cant harm, cause failing or completely destroy, ect..your hardware, it can and will, software/programs not only run and tell your hardware how to run (ie.. bios, drivers, the OS, over clocking programs and any other system type software/programs), but as well utilize said hardware (ie... games, benchmark programs and all other programs), hardware can not be used or function without software/programs to make them work.

not to mention, people have and can still create viruses (ie.. software) to cause hardware to fail/fry itself by going beyond its specs, tho that hasnt been very common now a days, its been done in the past.

-------------------------------

that being said...

in any case, OP... you were also in any case over working your sdd (a small ssd at that) with extra work, first off, recording should be storing on an hdd, unless ofc you have a separate ssd for recording by itself, in general, recording uses a ton of data transfer to said drive, whether its recording shows/movies/gameplay or what ever, also noting resolution also increases the amount of data said recording is saving onto the drive and while ssds have come a long way in how long they last, they do have a determined amount of writes before it begins to fail or significantly slow down, as for a hard drive, they have been known to last a very very long time, some with no issues at all, some with minor issues and ofc some simply failing, but majority tend to last for 20-30 or more years working just fine, just not running at speeds most would like.

as for what ever this "miner for internet values" is? im not sure....

i would suggest running your OS and/or any OS related programs on their own ssd.

run your games on their own ssd, for recording do that on its own ssd or hdd, hdd now a days are used for storage and recorded stuff would be considered storage and then can be transferred to something else later if need be.

also im my opinion, i personally would suggest the paging file (assuming you even use it, tho most programs require the use of one or they wont function properly, or at all) on its own small ssd (basically... disable the paging file on your OS drive and enable it on the drive you want the paging file to be ran on), i personally have my paging file setup on a 250GB msata drive from broken laptop, which i put into a msata to sata converter enclosure and placed into my current gaming desktop, to reduce wear on my OS drive and avoid any system slow down, that always happens when a paging file is in heavy use and still on an OS drive, it basically cause the whole computer and anything your trying to run, to run sluggish and laggy, most notably happening when playing games or using a program that requires the use of the paging file.

doing all that may be a bit more expensive, but it helps reduce wear on your drives and/or slow down on your system and keep system performance up to expectations.

there are tons of other things you can do to optimize and maintain your pc, but that would be a book in itself and is best simply looked up on the net.

also to note, there may or may not have been other issue you didnt notice, you could have had a power surge, that caused the port the drive is connected to, to fail, or the drive itself, or could just be hardware design faults from the manufacturer (like someone suggested) for example being production faults when the drive was created and had issue with chip/ect.. placement, soldering issues or circuit board faults, bad parts, improper testing... or in other cases, driver issues, ect..

also (as mentioned by another comment) could be simply corruption causing the whole (or some) drive to become unusable from your system crash and hard reset, its not a common thing, but it does happen, or just wiped clean from the crash, tho you can test said drive and possibly fix/correct any issues (assuming there is any issue to fix) with the drive to make it partially or fully usable again.
最後修改者:MonkehMaster; 2021 年 10 月 9 日 下午 9:55
Reggaejunkiedrew 2021 年 10 月 9 日 下午 10:51 
The write cycle stuff about SSDs is extremely overblown. That SSD in particular might be garbage, but in general it should not be an issue at all for the average user.

"Samsung states that their Samsung SSD 850 PRO SATA, with a capacity of 128 GB, 256 GB, 512 or 1 TB, is "built to handle 150 terabytes written (TBW), which equates to a 40 GB daily read/write workload over a ten-year period." Samsung even promises that the product is "withstanding up to 600 terabytes written (TBW)."

...


"The good news: These manufacturer figures are even lower than the real TBWs detected in a long-term test conducted by Germany´s most respected IT and Computer magazine c´t and the Heise publishing company. In the magazine´s test, they bought two SSDs each of the 12 most popular products available in 2016 and tested those for one year until the end of June 2017. The SSDs that were tested were OCZ TR150, Crucial BX 200, Samsung 750 Evo, Samsung 850 Pro, SanDisk Extreme Pro, and SanDisk Ultra II.

The experts from the magazine wrote bits of data on the SSDs using a special tool programmed by one of their experts to both analyze the performance as well as to constantly fill the disks with data.

The outcome of the tests conducted were astonishing: All of the drives tested were able to write more data than what was promised by the producer. Even cheaper drives were able to write more data than promised: The Crucial BX 200 drives were able to write 187 TB and 280 TB – that is more than 2.5 times the figure promised."

https://www.ontrack.com/en-ca/blog/how-long-do-ssds-really-last
Muppet among Puppets 2021 年 10 月 10 日 上午 12:19 
The tests of ssd lasting is about writing and then writing again.
In real life ssd write all the time. The less space left, the more they write.
The more they write on less space, the worse it gets.

They should last a long time, but you can destroy them faster.

When steam updates a game, it often copies the game, then rewrites and then writes back. That could easily double the write compared to the actual size later.

But updating itself can not destroy a ssd (if its not the last available write)


If you buy a ssd, at least 1tb. And keep 20% free space or more.
Arokhantos 2021 年 10 月 10 日 上午 2:01 
The ssd with windows on it will also tank most writes the aditonal ssd for a steam libary tho will not tank as much writes heck can stay at same level for a year even tho you install a new game on it once a month or updates
Tharon 2021 年 10 月 10 日 上午 2:44 
Web browsers are usually killer for SSD, expecially with video streaming. Steam is a glorified web browser so yes, it can stress your SSD if you browse the store a lot.

But your main browser write a lot more data, so if you want a culprit i place my bet on the main browser.
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張貼日期: 2021 年 10 月 9 日 下午 1:07
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