soggi wrote on 2024-10-02, 02:03:
Unfortunately there's no TBW value for my HDDs on the screenshots, so I can't really classify this. On first sight it seems 39.2 TBW is a bit low for a main PC in 4.25 years...but it's just my thought when I summarize my DLs, copying data and stuff (not to speak of TMP files, logs and virtual memory).
Nice statistics (I really looked at them), but you forgot this thread is about Windows 98 SE storage options - it's called "Storage options for Windows 98SE?". I said this more than once (f.e. "I was talking about inadequacies of SSDs in general and specifically on WinXP and earlier. "). Yes, right, I additionally was talking about WinXP, but it shares with Win98SE that it basically also doesn't support SSDs and additionally both don't fully support the HDDs/SSDs from the stats you linked to - I know there are some (older SSDs) with manufacturer tools supporting XP that way. SSDs will age faster on such systems. And there's another problem - the more the SSD is filled, the more the rest of the cells are strained. I have very often the case that a partition or the complete HDD is filled ~90% or more and the rest gets a lot of writes.
I'm not concerned about SSD performance degradation on a Windows 98 system and if I were, I would just secure erase the drive and restore from backup which will restore the drive's full performance.
I'm definitely not concerned about long term reliability because, as shown as above, spinning drives have tended to be less reliable (especially comparing new SSDs versus 20+ year old PATA HDDs), and I have backups of all my systems in case of a storage failure regardless the technology that storage media uses.
And I am also not concerned with exhausting the drive's write endurance (which for the 32 GB PSD330 I have is 20 TBW). I am only using about 5 GB of space, I could rewrite the entire file system daily for 11 years before I hit the TBW threshold. I don't even run the system daily, let alone rewrite the entire file system when I do.
Look, flash storage in general and SSDs in specific are a known quantity as they have been in the marketplace for over 15 years. We know about their reliability characteristics, we know what usage patterns they are good at, and we know about their performance. Your issue re: their usage seems to extend beyond PATA/Windows 98 don't support TRIM but all those concerns were addressed by the industry a long time ago.
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