![]() ![]() Cousin advised me that after deactivating it (I asked for the program's password beforehand because the C: partition has an installer file of a game that is occupying the should-be usable space that cannot be removed easily because of the program's restriction), I shouldn't use it further. Now, why did I brought up Shadow Defender? That's because I think its probably one of the culprits (I'll explain the other ones later) of why the health of the SSD is being degraded and is actually one of the reason my OS got bricked (or soft-bricked at first). The former is the one that always have the shadow copy layer and the other one is untouched and mostly for personal files, games (not that really resource intensive, the only resource intensive game that I've played, I think, is GTA IV (and EFLC)), all that sort of things. My cousin that gave this PC to me said that the program is there to prevent viruses, etc. ![]() I think what it does is that it creates a shadow copy of a partition, then reverts back to the state when the shadow copy was initially created when it shuts down/restarts but involves, more or less, blue screens, which I get used to and not worrying too much. This problem started with my the old copy of the OS that was previously installed and it was really bloated with apps, and also had this program called Shadow Defender. ![]() So I wanted to switch from an SSD that has 78% health (according to HDSentinel) to a brand new one, possibly with even bigger capacity. ![]()
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