This Windows 10 ‘Drive Optimization’ bug can corrupt your drive


The latest Windows 10 update seems to perform the automatic hard disk optimization process more often than it should. Although this is a necessary part of the maintenance of a hard disk, and Windows de TRIM command on your SSD hurts, excessively defragmentation the drive is generally not needed and can affect the lifespan of an SSD over time.

In the simplest terms, the defragment of a drive rearranges the data for more efficient loading. However, defragmenting the drive requires large-scale rewriting of the contents of the drive, and repeated defragmenting may wear out your SSD more quickly, because the microscopic cells SSThis store data on is weakened every time data is read or written.

Many experts suggest that you defrag your SSD only a maximum of once a month, and many even advise you not to defragment your SSD at all. But PCs with Windows 10 version 2004 are executing the auto-defrag every time the SSD is connected, including every time you restart your computer. It would take in lang time to fully remove the SSD, but those excessive defrags are harmful nonetheless.

Microsoft acknowledged the problem and will release a patch to fix it. Until then, you can turn off the auto-defrag tool in the Windows 10 settings to prevent unwanted rewrites:

Illustration for article titled This Windows 10 Drive Optimization Bug Could Corrupt Your Drive

Screenshot: Brendan Hesse

  1. Type “Defrag” in the Windows 10 search bar.
  2. Click “Defragment and Optimize Drives” from the search results to open the Optimize Drives window.
  3. Click “Change settings” under the Planned Optimization section (If the option says instead “Put on,” then the auto-defrag is already disabled.)
  4. Deselect “Run on schedule.”
  5. Click “Okay” dan “Close.”

You can still perform the defragment process manually by clicking on a station from the list and selecting “Optimize.”

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