Is upgrading the ssd easy enough that it is worth the cost savings?
Finally decided I think I am going to get a Steam Deck. Decided to look at upgrading the hard drive, it is a little more compacted than I thought it would be. For those who have swapped, was it easy enough?
Little pro-tip - I got a Corsair drive and tried putting it in external enclosure to copy to it, that didn't work.
These small Nvme drives are dram-less, so they borrow some memory from the host system. All of these drives have a fallback mode when they can't borrow host memory, which is slower. Apparently, the fallback mode is so well programmed that drive can crash during large write sessions.
It worked just fine once I put the new drive inside the Deck, and pulled data from the old drive sitting in the enclosure instead.
I work on computer hardware a lot, so I might not be the best judge, but this seems simple (If a bit tedious) enough for a normal person to accomplish.
Yeah, I was watching the video. The first thing that gave me pause was the, “drain battery to 25% as a charged lithium battery puncture can bee dangerous.”
And then I hate having to use the guitar picks to pry open stuff.
That said, I used to build my own computers. I have installed new SSDs in both of my ps5s. But it is not something I do often.
Yes. You just have to copy your existing system to your new drive. I used dd for this. Afterwards resize your storage partition (the largest one) on the new drive. I used gparted for this for it's simplicity.
if you don't care about the content of the drive (just steam games and everything in steam cloud), you can basically just reinstall steamOS with the official image
Have you installed a Linux operating system before?
The hardware swap is not difficult, but you do have to reinstall the OS on the new drive, so if you're not already familiar with that process it may be a hurdle. The good news is there shouldn't be any important data on it, so if you do have a problem you can just wipe it and start over.
I bought the original largest model, and in less than 6 months decided I wanted more than the 512GB. I wish I had saved the $200 and bought the cheapest model. There's no other appreciable difference.
The top end model has etched glare resistant glass on the panel, both on the old IPS displays and the newer OLED models.
My work sometimes comes with long hours of downtime in the outdoors with the sun shining, the anti glare glass is fantastic for that scenario. I know there are etched glass screen protectors, but I’ve seen one up close and didn’t look as clear as mine.
So, that’s at least one reason to go for it in my opinion.
Yeah I put a screen protector on mine right away. It's a portable device.
The combination of the etched screen and an etched screen protector definitely hurts the sharpness - I would've been better off with the standard glossy screen.
It's not hard at all, if you've done any kind of tech disassembly before you should be good. Just make sure you don't strip the screws (don't use a screwdriver that's too small, make sure it's all the way in the screws before turning it).
You will have to either clone the drive or install SteamOS fresh on the new SSD from a USB drive. They may have fixed it, but originally the SteamOS installation/recovery USB had a software bug that would crash the wifi driver if you connect to a 5GHz wifi 6 network. So if you have a WiFi 6 network, I would suggest only connecting to the 2.4Ghz version of it until you've completed setup and downloaded updates.
If you clone the drive you don't have to worry about that, but sometimes after cloning you have to realize the cloned partitions to actually take advantage of the larger drive.
If you run into any of those issues and need help, feel free to reply to me here and I'll do my best to help out.