Just use a Linux laptop with a working battery so you never have to worry about power outages or other system crashes. In that case, you don't need safe sync mode, and you don't have to kill your SSD.
Working battery ≠= avoiding system crashes | my local node has a UPS, and still Monero's client is dicey (Mac & Linux distros).
Particularly on its initial sync, Monero's daemon is flakeyAF.
If you (e.g.) don't allow `sync in background` (why is this not the default behavior?!), the official Monero client is notorious for locking up on wakeup. Once you kill the process, your local blockchain is [most likely] unusable.
Another reason to use safe-sync is (e.g.) if your system (Linux or whatnot) decides to update/restart during the several days it takes to sync-initially.
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Just out of curiosity, why do you abuse an SSD so (safe-mode, or not)?
For SSD-diehards, I'd recomment getting a very large size because this'll last longer, presuming the drive self-levels.
Working battery ≠= avoiding system crashes | my local node has a UPS, and still Monero's client is dicey (Mac & Linux distros).
Particularly on its initial sync, Monero's daemon is flakeyAF.
If you (e.g.) don't allow `sync in background` (why is this not the default behavior?!), the official Monero client is notorious for locking up on wakeup. Once you kill the process, your local blockchain is [most likely] unusable.
Another reason to use safe-sync is (e.g.) if your system (Linux or whatnot) decides to update/restart during the several days it takes to sync-initially.
----
Just out of curiosity, why do you abuse an SSD so (safe-mode, or not)?
For SSD-diehards, I'd recomment getting a very large size because this'll last longer, presuming the drive self-levels.