this post was submitted on 08 Mar 2024
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Thanks for that insight. The hard thing is that getting things from Amazon or other web stores in Central America where I live is not easy. I ordered this drive in November and received it two weeks ago. I was sure it would work, as my G3 laptop came from the factory with a M.2 Kingston drive, so I assumed NVME was a no-brainer.
The real kicker is that this was planned as a gift to my partner who has the same laptop, but with a Toshiba HDD. Boot time >2 min, vs 17s on my SSD, and even faster (theoretically) on this M.2. Sigh... poor prep on my part.
Thanks again for the kind help. I had no idea.
That is dissappointing. If you search you might find somone that has already modified the BIOS image. or has an Option ROM available. You should see load option ROM as a BIOS option. But you never with the interwebs to know if the download firmware image it will brick your system or be some malware.
I'll do some research on this front to see what I find. Thanks
As a side note you can put the efi boot partition on a hdd during install, but the OS on the NVME. it will boot up quick
I may go down that road, but the main push was to remove the almost ten year old platter based magnetic drive. Maybe I'll look into placing the ESP on a flash drive until I have a better solution. Bummer. This secret upgrade to breathe new life into my partner's laptop isn't going well at all.
I feel the pain. I went through the same with my Dell system. I found somebody selling a cheap industrial sata 2.5 ssd that had good consistent read speed, and threw that in for the boot partition, and nvme for everything else. Disappointing but bootup is stil quick in the 30-35 seconds instead of minutes