So you chose to not provide a driver for this drive, then - after some months, when all the testing is over - significantly degraded performance whenever the FUA command is used (on a consumer device, where FUA is hardly important), without having a ...
Yesterday, the author of AS SSD Benchmark released a new version. Below is the change log:* NVMe SSD support* 4K LBA Sector support* Needs .NET Framework 4.6* Improved accuracy with fast SSDs1) One question remains, though: when does Windows use the ...
Vendors ignore the FUA bit as a fix, because they have their priorities straight: for end users, the (extremely low) chance of data corruption due to power loss does not, in any way, justify a permanent performance drop, especially not AFTER people b...
With all due respect, but this is total nonsense. It's not about AS SSD Benchmark, it's about the day-to-day use implications of the changes you made. It is well-known that the default Windows NVMe driver uses FUA, so - together with the fact that yo...