Complete nonsense. You seem to think that TRIM is some sort of magical command that makes SSDs work better. Spend a little more time on understanding the reality and your opinion will change.
Overprovisioning works extremely well. So well that there is really no reason to use TRIM, and plenty of reasons to avoid using it due to the many reasons stated by myself and a few others here.
Overprovisioning and TRIM do not have linear relationships. You don't get double the value by using both, or even double the value by, say, doubling the amount you overprovsion, or doubling the amount of free space the SSD thinks it has due to using TRIM. Beyond a certain point, overprovisioning and TRIMmed space will have only a minimal effect on actual wear because, as I've said already, a good SSD will do both static AND dynamic wear leveling. Dynamic wear leveling alone using TRIMmed or overprovisioned space, no matter how much space is available, only delays the inevitable need to relocate static blocks.
You can reduce the copying the SSD has to do, but beyond a certain point the amount of copying that remains will be so far under the radar compared to nominal filesystem operation (normal writes to files, etc), that it just won't have any more of an impact.
The non-deterministic nature of TRIM (depending heavily on how full your filesystem is and how fragmented it is), not to mention firmware bugs, filesystem bugs, the impossibility of diagnosing and tracking down corruption when it occurs, problems with feeding TRIMs through block managers which use large-block CRCs, and many other issues wind up creating huge complexities that increases your chance of hitting a bug somewhere that blows you up... it's just not a good trade-off. I will take the *highly* deterministic and generally bullet-proof overprovisioning method over TRIM any day of the week.
The only time I advocate using TRIM is when someone wants to wipe and repartition a SSD from scratch. That's it. I don't even advocate it for cleaning up the swap partition on reboot because then you can't recover crash dumps (and you might already be paging after that point so...). Though I suppose one could add some logic to TRIM the swap partition if no crash dump is present. That's about as far as I would go, though.
-Matt