Likely cant read DATA properly from NVMe SSDs
I have done a little research since then, and I have found out:
The softwares made for SATA devices are not compatible for the new NVMe SSDs, since they don't have the TRIM feature in the classic form, because it is an ATA command.
NVMe SSDs have a similar function built in the "Dataset Management Command". You can check it via Hard Disk Sentinel under Informations / NVMe Features.
So in theory TRIM is only supported by PATA and SATA drives, the NVMe drives only have a similar solution for the same function, which is deleting the unused cells.
But the manufacturers still mention it as TRIM in the marketing brochures.
And please God... why the suggestion to run defrag software on SSDs???
There IS NOT any defrag software in Windows 10, but Optimize Drives. It automatically recognizes the SSD drives, and the only thing happens when you click the optimize button on an SSD is running the TRIM command. The Samsung Magician's Optimize feature does exactly the same. It doesn't defrag at all.
it hurts the drive's lifespan. It wears them out!!
Don't have to spare your SSD. >>
LINK<<
"Over the past 18 months, we’ve watched modern SSDs easily write far more data than most consumers will ever need. Errors didn’t strike the Samsung 840 Series until after 300TB of writes, and it took over 700TB to induce the first failures. The fact that the 840 Pro exceeded 2.4PB is nothing short of amazing, even if that achievement is also kind of academic."
If you write
100GB every day, it tooks for the 840 Pro
67,3 years (!!!) to reach its first failure. The controller will die a lot sooner.
Did anyone install the Samsung NVMe driver (v3.1)?