i can agree on this its not affect mutch but i bit skeptic after i readed lot deeper about todays ssd drives example 1 thing needed to consider is size on ssd i give hint. Lets take 250GB ssd witch warranty is 5 years. Basicly if you write lot every day or week its need tobe considered because drive size. example 250GB SSD have less chips that means less cells to destroy. If you have 1TB SSD there is more cells and chps in total that mean in low usage its last lot longer then example 250GB ssd what ppl use for os drive. Also every ssd have amount how mutch TB witten it can handle before TEC and TEC calculated by mgf given warranty.
A SSD that dies after few months, obviously, has nothing to do with the cell wearing. You were unlucky with electronics, in a way which isn't any different from a dead logic board on a platter HDD. Perhaps, a worn out SSD shouldn't stop working, it should just become read only, like a cdrom. I wrote "should" because I have yet to see one of them. To be more precise, right now, I'm using one of the oldest I installed, aka 6/7 yrs old (I got it back because a size upgrade), that SSD is marked as totally worn out by SSDlife. So I'm using it my main PC as a guinea pig. Now, after one year of heavy usage, that SSD is still working w/o a glitch
256 GB 840 Pro still alive after 2.4 PB data writes. That's way more than I expected. Samsung has done a good job. I believe 850 Pro even better.