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Is it necessary to defrag your system drive once in a while?

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Posted by: Seedler

Is it necessary to defarg your system drive once in a while?



Posted by: tesco

It will run faster if you do, when the files aren't fragmented the disk will have less work to do when it loads them, so it will load them faster.



Posted by: S!X

Yes, its a good idea.



Posted by: clocker

Is this a trick question?



Posted by: Seedler

Is this a trick question?

nope, it's just that people have been saying that you should for years, but I've NEVER honestly noticed any difference after I do. And it's annoying because disk defrag takes too long.



Posted by: clocker

Jeez, I would think with your setup that a defrag would only take a few minutes.



Posted by: Cheese

I use Diskeeper. I have it set to Screensaver mode so it defrags whilst I'm doing other things like sleeping, sleeping at work or sleeping at uni.



Posted by: Virtualbody1234

Is this a trick question?
It must be. Just check what he's asking: Is it necessary to defarg your system...



Posted by: clocker

I wondered whether anyone else saw that or if maybe my monitor(s) were overclocked too far.



Posted by: abu_has_the_power

defrag. it really helps

i've been downloading a lot of dvdr images recently, and i have to extract them. i just defraged a few days ago, and before that, extracting a 4.5 gig image takes a lot longer than after i defrag.



Posted by: tesco

It must be. Just check what he's asking: Is it necessary to defarg your system...
thread title used to be same, I edited that.:unsure:



Posted by: Virtualbody1234

It must be. Just check what he's asking:
thread title used to be same, I edited that.:unsure:
Good work! http://www.mcbrien.plus.com/liam/img/smilies/thmbup.gif



Posted by: Duffman

Yes. use diskeeper, you will notice a difference.



Posted by: thewizeard

I use diskeeper too, and apart from the defarg ..:)..function, one can also adjust the paging and MTF files....

If of course you only defrag your files occasionally, then it will take a long time. These programs enable you to choose on the fly defragmentation or, at specific times, when you are least likely to be using your computer... Defragmenting your files in a timely manner, will also save a lot of wear and tear on you hard disk or disks..... presuming of course that you have considerable numbers of files and GBs on your 250 GB hard disk.



Posted by: Seedler

That brings up another questions:

Because I am pretty much downloading torrents 24/7, is DEFRAGING possible when you're still writing data to your HD?



Posted by: Barbarossa

That brings up another questions:

Because I am pretty much downloading torrents 24/7, is DEFRAGING possible when you're still writing data to your HD?

Don't think so. :ermm:



Posted by: Cheese

That brings up another questions:

Because I am pretty much downloading torrents 24/7, is DEFRAGING possible when you're still writing data to your HD?

*DEFRAGGING



Posted by: tesco

That brings up another questions:

Because I am pretty much downloading torrents 24/7, is DEFRAGING possible when you're still writing data to your HD?
Ya, it just wont defrag what's being written.



Posted by: peat moss

I started paying more attention to "defagging" as my wife calls it years ago when I got one of the first cd-rw's . Takes seconds on my setup using Diskeeper set and forget it .



Posted by: tesco

OK I've sorta got some proof that defragmenting really helps.

When repairing rar files using par2's, a dvd-size collection (just under 5gb) takes about 12 mins for me if I try and repair as soonas it finsihes downloading (fragmented).

If I leave teh file on my computer until the next day, it will ave ben defragmented during teh night by diskeeper set it and forget it, and repairing only takes about 1 and a half minutes.

I've noticed this a few times and the results are consistant... :)



Posted by: 15%

most people cannot begin to understand the simplicity of the bookshelf effect.



Posted by: clocker

most people cannot begin to understand the simplicity of the bookshelf effect.
And I would be one of them.
WTF is the "bookshelf effect"?



Posted by: Yoga

I've heard that fragmentation is not much of a problem on a mac or linux, is there any truth in that.



Posted by: theSpam

I've heard that fragmentation is not much of a problem on a mac or linux, is there any truth in that.

For Linux, that's quite true. I'm sure it has something to do with the journaling feature included with most of it's filesytems.

I'm not too sure about MacOS though.






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