ChristineBCW
Regular Contributor
Back in mid-August, one of the OVERCLOCK NET writers displayed a bad behavior by his Samsung EVO SSD, and it seems to have been studied and accepted as a problem by Samsung.
This issue comes from a remarkably slow-read for Old Written Data blocks.
(As of this date - a bit more than a month into this issue - this thread is 90+ pages. I read thru the first few which includes several In Denial Questions but then as the results were repeated, we see "acceptance by Samsung" in the Pages 50-70 range, and now solution possibilities are underway.)
One of the horrifying possibilities is a firmware update that require Re-Writes.
Of boot drive SSDs! Oh boy.
"Just buy a duplicate. Update the new one's firmware. Then, clone the Old Bad SSD on it - it will only clone the data-blocks." Then update the Old One and see if the Data Blocks were wiped out and need a re-load. If so, then use that New Drive and re-clone it back to the old one. Return the New One."
Gag. I assume the East German judges will still give out a lot of 10.0's for such gymnastics.
This issue comes from a remarkably slow-read for Old Written Data blocks.
(As of this date - a bit more than a month into this issue - this thread is 90+ pages. I read thru the first few which includes several In Denial Questions but then as the results were repeated, we see "acceptance by Samsung" in the Pages 50-70 range, and now solution possibilities are underway.)
One of the horrifying possibilities is a firmware update that require Re-Writes.
Of boot drive SSDs! Oh boy.
"Just buy a duplicate. Update the new one's firmware. Then, clone the Old Bad SSD on it - it will only clone the data-blocks." Then update the Old One and see if the Data Blocks were wiped out and need a re-load. If so, then use that New Drive and re-clone it back to the old one. Return the New One."
Gag. I assume the East German judges will still give out a lot of 10.0's for such gymnastics.