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I took the plunge and installed Windows 7 on my computer. Even better, I installed it on my new Intel x25m (got to love that SSD goodness).
Windows Vista was known to thrash, throttle, and otherwise wear out an SSD. Apparently Windows 7 addresses some of the more serious issues.
However, I am more concerned that maybe Windows 7 is not using those optimizations. I am paranoid, but at the cost of the SSD (ouch!!), I want to get as much life out of it as possible.
Is it possible to confirm that Windows 7 is using all of the cool new SSD optimizations? That it has properly confirmed that your drive is an SSD?
Thanks for your feedback. Contrary to the Q & A, Superfetch IS running on this system. And given the answer to the command line I was given, I think that Windows 7 is NOT using optimizations. VERY ANNOYING. Is there something I can do to make Windows 7 treat my drive like the SSD that it is?
Also, what is this talk of the drive "alignment"? Is there a way to confirm that as well?
Also, disk defragging WAS enabled. I disabled it.
FYI, the Windows Experience Index for the system is 7.8 for the drive.
Don't dismiss defragging an SSD too quickly; see: http://superuser.com/questions/13668/what-does-a-defrag-actually-do/17323#17323
– Leftium – 2010-04-18T11:44:55.793The simplest thing you want to do in order that windows will use your SSD as much as it can, is set it as your only swap drive. See: http://superuser.com/questions/237813/how-can-i-move-the-page-file-to-another-physical-disk-location. It changes lives :)
– rubmz – 2017-01-10T22:04:32.197You can get the alignment info using
wmic partition get startingoffset
quite what you do with the numbers that gives you I'm not totally sure. – GAThrawn – 2009-11-28T16:30:30.813