Install random shit for the promise of .0001ms seek? Jesus Christ guys ๐คฆโโ๏ธ.
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I'd be wary of importing random unintelligible registry keys from sites purporting to increase system performance for free. Even if they're posted on social media, the land of rigorous fact checking, rationality and absolutely no malicious actors.
It mentions & includes a link to the NotebookCheck site as the source. It's certainly NOT an unreliable site.
Hmmm. The NVMe standard has existed since 2011, and Samsung released their first commercially-available drive with it in 2013. So Microsoft has had at least 12 years to make nvmedisk.sys the standard driver for these disks.
Using this driver, however, is fraught with risks. Not all NVMe SSDs support it, and if incompatible, it could break Windows 11 boot.
Probably why it isn't standard, especially since there's a driver that does work even if it's suboptimal.
And obviously, there's been no possible way to try loading the modern driver and if that fails, falling back to the legacy one.
This is once again Microsoft refusing to improve performance, because that doesn't directly increase profits.
That's fair. I'm certainly not one to defend msoft, nor do I really have the technical knowledge to rebut. Is it possible that 'trying' the driver as you suggested could damage the drive or corrupt data? Just wondering if there's a legitimate reason they wouldn't go for a seemingly easy win aside from being a generally dumb organization.
There's always the option of gathering device info first, then using the appropriate driver. Either the SSD is in a "known supported models" list, or it reports support for whatever feature the new driver needs.
It's technically possible that straight up trying an unsupported driver can cause physical damage, but this can be avoided by carefully selecting the driver. From MS pov, they'd have to extensively test this driver on a bunch of SSDs and configurations, but it would lead to a performance improvement.
Ah, any developer who suggested that probably got the same answer I get at work: "Testing costs money, so unless we absolutely have to, no."
So they can't just write some probe code? It really can't be that hard to determine if there's support.
If only there was a way to do a check for compatibility on the os side for a standard that has been available since before the predecessor os was released and fall back to the older driver if it fails
laughs in Linux
It's probably vibe coded by AI folks. Be wary.
It certainly is, and when it breaks because it can't handle some obscure use case, I won't bat an eye
Interesting. I presume that over time, MS plans to tweak the driver, increasing safety and security, and then start transitioning known safe devices over. Seems surprisingly responsible.
Only like 10 years late
It's 2026 (basically) and Linux still has major GPU stability issues and doesn't support HDR or vrr over HDMI units using a valve deck image.ย
Glass houses my man.
This is actually kinda cool! Hopefully it eventually becomes a "default" of some sort or at least has an easy toggle in compatible configs.
