The key information you need for flash memory devices is the ENDURANCE which is the amount of data that can be written to the device before it fails. It is typically quoted in TBW - Terabytes Written. There is a standard for measuring the figure for various work loads. I think it is JESD218 which there is an overview of at but the specs are behind a paywall now. (Used to be free to download). The standard is interesting, but not required reading you will pleased to know. There are two workloads that are often quoted in spec sheets. The client workload - meaning a typical office worker workload. The server workload - meaning a server workload. There is also a random workload, but its is rare to see that quoted as the life times are very short. Personal I will not buy an SSD or memory stick that does not publish its JESD218 client workload figures. As examples I've quickly found specs for samsung and SanDisk. find endurance on the page. It tells you that the drive 1200TBW. Then figures for SanDisk SSD's are here https://kb.sandisk.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/23603/~/ssd-endurance and you can compare these figures, the best is 600TBW. FYI the last SSD I got was a Intel part and its had 1000TBW+ Endurance.
power-on-hours and reallocations are interesing, but its the endurance you need to predict life time. Assuming you can calculate a figure the amount of data that you write your device.
I back to a file server from all my hosts, then copy off the backups and put that copy off site. All use Fedora of course. Barry
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