I stopped treating my old 250GB SATA SSD as e-waste, and now I can’t live without it
Repurposing old PC components is always recommended, but sometimes, you can't figure out anything useful for hardware you're no longer actively using. That's what happened with my 250GB SATA SSD when I switched to NVMe storage years ago. The SATA drive was the first SSD I had ever used, and it transformed my PC experience. After the move to NVMe, though, the SATA SSD remained unused for years. Windows 10 was my primary OS, but when I needed to install Windows 11 for work, I finally found a good use for the SATA SSD. It was just large enough for a Windows partition, plus it saved me the hassle of dual-booting Windows 10 and 11. Additionally, the old drive was perfect as a testing ground for stuff I didn't want running on my primary NVMe SSD. I could also use the SATA SSD as an external or recovery SSD in the future, provided it remains healthy enough.
Repurposing old PC components is always recommended, but sometimes, you can’t figure out anything useful for hardware you’re no longer actively using. That’s what happened with my 250GB SATA SSD when I switched to NVMe storage years ago. The SATA drive was the first SSD I had ever used, and it transformed my PC experience. After the move to NVMe, though, the SATA SSD remained unused for years. Windows 10 was my primary OS, but when I needed to install Windows 11 for work, I finally found a good use for the SATA SSD. It was just large enough for a Windows partition, plus it saved me the hassle of dual-booting Windows 10 and 11. Additionally, the old drive was perfect as a testing ground for stuff I didn’t want running on my primary NVMe SSD. I could also use the SATA SSD as an external or recovery SSD in the future, provided it remains healthy enough.
William Garcia
Boston
Boston
Published by: aplhsindia.in
