Constellation16

joined 10 months ago
[–] [email protected] 1 points 9 months ago

Yes, Windows does this. I stumbled onto that too when my incremental backups were 'randomly' big. It's just one of many many thing that are terribly broken about Windows and especially NTFS. The issue is that the scheduled task performs media-specific "optimizations" by default, which in case of SSD does normally only mean retrim, but every so often also an actual defrag. I disabled the task and do it manually now. You still have "live" trims when you deleted files, at least on NVMe, I think it's off for SATA drives though, as many are buggy with it.

Another really stupid thing is that you should disable shadow copies, otherwise it can happen that data gets written as many times as you have (persistent) shadow copies, eg writing 1G with 6 shadow copies -> 6G written. Absolutely insane.

You often hear this type of "internet wisdom" repeated from decades ago that all this is a solved problem, but it's really not and no one cares about fixing these fundamental issues at Microsoft. They did seemingly pick up work on ReFS again, but from reports it's still very buggy and who knows if it will be ready for Windows 12 next year or if that is even their goal.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 9 months ago

Shame this sub doesn't have an original source policy, because this regurgitated article absolutely sucks.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 10 months ago

I'm talking about the Mach.2, Exos 2X14. There is only an official SATA version of the 2X18.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 10 months ago (2 children)

Can you post some pictures of the drive? Officially there isn't even a Sata version.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 10 months ago (1 children)

At least for home use it's really not. The de-facto is still 1G Ethernet from 1999.

10GBASE-T exists since almost two decades (2006) and is still expensive, and even the "affordable" NBase-T 2.5G stuff (2016) is only really cheap for the cards itself, most "router"/gateways have no or only a single 2.5G port and 2.5G switches are overpriced, unmanaged, and still in a "premium niche".

In contrast, you had Wifi6 APs for some while now that could do ~1.8Gb/s to clients and now with Wifi7 you can reach ludicrous wireless speeds of 5Gb/s+ to clients, but I'm doubtful switches or even 5/10G cards will get much cheaper because of this. It seems manufacturers don't want to address the market of people having cabled infrastructure and instead everything is supposed to wireless with be wireless mesh-backbone now.

[–] [email protected] 0 points 10 months ago

Sampling since August, the new 28TB SMR HDD is also ramping, adding to the company’s SMR leadership position and momentum as its 26TB SMR HDD exabyte shipments reached nearly half of its data center exabytes shipped in the first quarter fiscal year 2024.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 10 months ago

This is such a stupid decision, and then even for such an inconsequential feature that so far only works for two games. And I doubt there is any significant group that would upgrade from 12th/13th Gen even if it would be more widespread. All this does is create a lasting bad impression of people that recently bought a new Intel CPU. The person in charge needs firing.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 10 months ago

That new Wifi chip also supports dual-band simultaneous (DBS), as far as I understand. They already use this on Windows with other DBS chips like Intel AX411 or Qualcomm FastConnect 6900 and their Steam Networking API to achieve lower latency in their popular multiplayer games. I wonder if they will do this on SteamOS too, also potentially for simultaneous downloads over both bands. Also comes with a dedicated Bluetooth antenna.

Also I wonder if they upgraded the SD card slot to support DDR200, was that benchmarked in any review?