It doesn't display the capacity because it asks me to initialize it but I press cancel when it does.
The drive is the Samsung Evo 850 M.2 which I think is a SATA SSD and I think the model number is MZ-N5E500BW. I bought the adapter linked below:
I'm going to put the BiWin in this external enclosure to replace my ancient 1TB mechanical 2.5" external.
The enclosure depends on the drive and the age of your laptop
2.5" SATA SSD
M.2 SATA SSD
SSK Aluminum USB 3.2 Gen 1 to M.2 SATA NGFF SSD Enclosure Adapter(for M.2 SATA SSD only)
M.2 NVMe PCIe SSD
SSK Aluminum M.2 NVMe PCIe / SATA SSD Enclosure Adapter, USB 3.2 Gen 2 (10 Gbps)
They all give a USB connection to the other computer for AV testing. The AV that are clients order. The license for the most is
Webroot Internet Security Complete
It has been the most effective, while being the least intrusive running in the background with Windows.
If you need additional help determining the drive, let us know the complete model number of the laptop and we can help you.
If it's just as a boot drive, any will be fine but err on the size of something larger (100GB+) just because bigger = higher TBW (but also, the amount that TrueNAS writes will have boot SSDs lasting decades). I wouldn't even waste SATA ports on them. I use two of these plugged into M.2 SATA USB enclosures (make sure you match the interface -- these kinds of enclosures generally only support one of SATA or NVME). They work great as mirrored USB boot drives, but with higher quality flash that will outlast everything else in my build. 120GB is rated at 40TBW, but I write mere megabytes to the disk over a six month period; I don't imagine I write even 1TB/year at my current rate).