my computer runs on an nvme and recently when i boot, it keeps prompting me for a bitlocker recovery key, after entering the key, the computer just freezes\locks up during boot. If i plug it into another computer, its detected and again prompts for a recovery key and again after entering it, just locks up and i still cant access the info, any idea on how to repair it (or if its even possible??)
It probably has really good quality memory which was the case when it first came to market. The trend has been to increase capacity while reducing cost. They reduce costs by increasing the amount of bits stored in each memory cell. More bits per cell is cheaper to make but the memory will wear out faster. So be careful what you are paying for. If the SSD is important than better to do your homework and pay a bit more for a good quality product. The really cheap SSD are ticking time bombs
Because that 3k was for 3000 erase/programming cycles. Current drives are more like 300 cycles (QLC NAND). The drive in the video is also almost 1 PiBs of written data, where these drives are rated for something like 100-150TiB. It has performed remarkably! If you're using any kind of drive in a server, you must monitor it or exchange it after some time. This person did none.
I appreciate you recording and posting this video, it helped me troubleshoot my Samsung 970 EVO Plus drive. Using thermal camera I discovered that E-fuse gets hot right away and that pins 8 9 and 10 show 0. The drive is not visible in bios. I was thinking of bridging pins 1,2,3 with pins 8,9,10 on the efuse in order to regain access to my data but I wanted to ask if you think that would be a dumb idea?
It set itself to read only to prevent it from bricking / losing data which is exactly the gold standard it should do.
my computer runs on an nvme and recently when i boot, it keeps prompting me for a bitlocker recovery key, after entering the key, the computer just freezes\locks up during boot. If i plug it into another computer, its detected and again prompts for a recovery key and again after entering it, just locks up and i still cant access the info, any idea on how to repair it (or if its even possible??)
How does it happen? I have one of the original 2.5 Kingston HyperX 3k 120gb's drives running windows daily for 11 years with 0 issues
with out much writes they wont wear easy or if its just for reading it can almost go for ever
It probably has really good quality memory which was the case when it first came to market. The trend has been to increase capacity while reducing cost. They reduce costs by increasing the amount of bits stored in each memory cell. More bits per cell is cheaper to make but the memory will wear out faster. So be careful what you are paying for. If the SSD is important than better to do your homework and pay a bit more for a good quality product. The really cheap SSD are ticking time bombs
Because that 3k was for 3000 erase/programming cycles. Current drives are more like 300 cycles (QLC NAND).
The drive in the video is also almost 1 PiBs of written data, where these drives are rated for something like 100-150TiB. It has performed remarkably!
If you're using any kind of drive in a server, you must monitor it or exchange it after some time. This person did none.
I appreciate you recording and posting this video, it helped me troubleshoot my Samsung 970 EVO Plus drive. Using thermal camera I discovered that E-fuse gets hot right away and that pins 8 9 and 10 show 0. The drive is not visible in bios. I was thinking of bridging pins 1,2,3 with pins 8,9,10 on the efuse in order to regain access to my data but I wanted to ask if you think that would be a dumb idea?
Hi i have Toshiba 250 gb ssd nvme its having trouble booting up. Can i ship the ssd need the data to recover 4 year research paper are stuck in it
1:30 onwards. The word is pronounced "cash" as in money. Expert? These people have no backup?