![]() ![]() Winning firms-which we define as those that grew net new revenues (revenues associated with positive net flows) at a rate greater than the industry average for the 10-year period and amounted to about 20 firms in total-grew their total industry revenue share from 24% to 32%. But an interesting phenomenon, which we did not observe meaningfully in the periods preceding the GFC, emerged clearly in the research: Winning firms represented all of the net consolidation gains and then some. This group represented slightly more than 55% of the industry’s total revenues as of year-end 2009 and grew to slightly more than 60% by year-end 2019. Just think of it as a fuel gauge when it hits 10-5% time to buy or use a new one.We analyzed 50 of the largest asset managers globally in the decade following the GFC. Again the percentage is ALWAYS just the life left nothing more its why they all say GOOD. In any case SSD's are common or the norm today and their cheap to boot so when it gets close to the end just buy another one or a bunch of em I always a have a few SSD's as backups in storage just in case etc. No offense but how could you ever think it was the other way round? 90% used? LOL! That would be impossible unless you write TB's of data a day or your drive is broken. Or use the one that came with your drive its usually the most accurate as its made for the exact drive you own. Use a real app or payware program that is more accurate not these lame free ones like Crystal etc that ONLY show SMART a good program shows every single parameter not just SMART. For example one of my drives after 4 years of use now has 97% life expectancy so you must you your drive as either a main drive or for games or something like storage or server use that constantly writes to the disk in big chunks. I don't use my SSD's for gaming or storage only for OS's and productivity software like Security,Diagnostic, Tool or business type software NO games or media etc. Anyway 90% or what ever % means HOW MUCH LIFE YOU HAVE LEFT. Use the diagnostic software that came with your drive.I use them and a payware program named Hard Disk Sentinel on all my WD SSD 500mb-1TB Drives in my rigs. SMART overall-health self-assessment test result: PASSED Log Page Attributes (0x0e): Cmd_Eff_Lg Ext_Get_Lg Telmtry_Lg Optional NVM Commands (0x005e): Wr_Unc DS_Mngmt Wr_Zero Sav/Sel_Feat Timestmp Optional Admin Commands (0x0017): Security Format Frmw_DL Self_Test Local Time is: Fri Apr 8 13:22:51 2022 ISTįirmware Updates (0x12): 1 Slot, no Reset required Smartctl 7.2 r5155 (local build)Ĭopyright (C) 2002-20, Bruce Allen, Christian Franke, = START OF INFORMATION SECTION = This to report the endurance used or SSD life left (100% – % used) asĪ percentage. That shows the actual wear out of the drive. Percentage Used field, which is like a gas gauge for the endurance The easy way to monitor endurance of an NVMe SSD is the SMART Try running the Crucial Storage Executive tool to get a more accurate SMART reading that (should) follow Crucial's definitions by the book.įrom my laptop Percentage Used: 6% which means 94% is remaining (estimate) from the spec These attributes are not a full picture of the health of a drive, but an expectation of how much usable life is left.īecause the attribute is vendor-defined, it can be complicated and confusing to figure out how each drive implements it. For percent lifetime remaining we would simply take (3000-100)/3000 = 96-97%. ![]() For example if your drive is rated for 3000 block erases and you have a total of 100, your Percentage Lifetime Used would be 100/3000, or 3-4%. ![]() ![]() Your Crucial SSD will keep track of this life with SMART attribute 173, “Average Block Erase Count.” The Lifetime Used is a reflection of the block erase count in terms of a percentage. A solid state drive, like any flash memory-based storage device, has a limited amount of data which can be written to the memory blocks before they start to lose their reliability, and eventually go into read only mode. In regards to the attribute named “Percentage Lifetime Used” (sometimes referred to as “Percent Lifetime Remaining”), this is simply a metric for how much wear life is left on your SSD. After some additional research, I came across this article that mentions the following: ![]()
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