For now, only option i know, and really necessary if you wanna be able to do something on the machine unless you have zero other things that need to get done, may be. Fix Your Stuff Community Store. Back Answers Index. Nick nick Rep: View the answer I have this problem too Subscribed to new answers. Is this a good question? Yes No. Voted Undo. Score 1. Chosen Solution. Well it worked with Windows 10 32bit but very, very slow. So a success yet a failure. It has a SATA 1.
But hey, the scanner is amazing for old photos, etc.! Good news: I recently got the Dell Inspiron upgraded to a SSD drive with very good results by using the following components: 1. In reply to DaveM's post on December 3, Thanks so much Dave for your reply. Thanks again for your expertise. Hi Marian Trust me, once that returned 0, then everything is as it should be. That setting is counter intuitive, in the registry and many other parts of Windows, 1 is true enabled and 0 is false disabled So, because that setting is Disable.
Amazing but greek to me. Thanks again for confirming that in fact my TRIM is enabled. Despite lack of official TRIM, I know various other people that have been going a long stretch with theirs on such setup using manual software that is made for the device to issue TRIM command.
I have a good PAE patch that allows up to 64 gigs of memory, DX 10 mod, and an unofficial iso with a few desktop tweaks.
XP Ultimate By Johnny. I do not want to jeopardize the health of this SSD at any cost, so I need some advice from those with experience on the matter. Aside TRIM. Is there anything within the filesystem of XP that can negatively impact a modern solid state hard drive? If this can be done, what must one do? Manually issue TRIM every so often. I'd say once per week? As with manual TRIM issue.
Now I'm still skeptical tbh, can't afford to frack up an SSD. Besides lack in proper partition algorithm and TRIM services aside. Is there anything I should be advised about with XP? Also since this is my 1st SSD.
Used it for development Still have the drive today, no problems. How often? Every month, week, day, hour? Couple times a week. I'm assuming I just happened to pick bad ones then.
Looking online, people seem to recommend the Samsung Pro. I've had good luck with them under 7 so I might pick one up. Isn't writing large chunks of data the ideal usage pattern for SSDs?
Performance will degrade, but you're still getting a massive upgrade due to it being an SSD vs. However, I might look into something like deploying a free Hyper-V server and XP within that, to virtualize the hardware.
If this piece of equipment has to stick around forever, eventually you're not going to be able to get hardware that supports XP very well. Performance should be nearly the same, the overhead to run Hyper-V is minimal, and you can then migrate that VM to new hardware in the future if you have to. Plus you can snapshot it, since all hardware goes belly up on occasion. Just food for thought. Kept the performance of the SSD working well.
Some SSDs have the needed space pre-partitioned, so when you fill the disk you don't run out of GC space. Not sure which brands do that. Just running the vendor utility on the drive periodically has worked fine for me.
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