I recently thought it was that time of the month to defrag my HDD, i used the windows defrag application, only to find out that a lot of files couldn't be defragged.
So i found a program called defraggler, made by the same people who made CCleaner, so you know its good! :)
This was my HDD result after using defraggler thoroughly.
[IMG]http://i625.photobucket.com/albums/tt337/bull3tmagn3t1234/hdd.jpg[/IMG]
Awesome... only 1 little thing that can't be defragged, but no big deal, a lot of things get fragmented just after a couple hours of computer use,
but that small amount is so small, that my fragmentation is still at 0%, so really not a big deal.
Link: [url]http://www.piriform.com/defraggler[/url]
Shouldn't this go in the Windows subforum?
r8 l8 m8
I use this in addition to Auslogics Defrag Screensaver.
I prefer [url=http://www.mydefrag.com/]MyDefrag[/url]. It has scripting support so you can set up your own defragging and optimization routines.
I prefer stuff I can run from the command line.
Because batch files are my life.
Diskeeper defrags 24/7 and yet you wouldn't know it was there. It also features 'intelliwrite', which ensures writes are done in such a way that fragmentation is prevented as much as possible - something linux users have enjoyed for years.
It may not be free software, but I can't believe people still defrag manually, or even on a schedule :P
[QUOTE=Darkimmortal;21445379]Diskeeper defrags 24/7 and yet you wouldn't know it was there. It also features 'intelliwrite', which ensures writes are done in such a way that fragmentation is prevented as much as possible - something linux users have enjoyed for years.
It may not be free software, but I can't believe people still defrag manually, or even on a schedule :P[/QUOTE]
NTFS sucks, we know. Can we carry on?
Defragging as a screensaver and keeping defraggler or a command line tool (Like the one that comes with windows) hanging around works fine for me.
[QUOTE=Darkimmortal;21445379]Diskeeper defrags 24/7 and yet you wouldn't know it was there. It also features 'intelliwrite', which ensures writes are done in such a way that fragmentation is prevented as much as possible - something linux users have enjoyed for years.
It may not be free software, but I can't believe people still defrag manually, or even on a schedule :P[/QUOTE]
Shame diskeeper runs like shit on some systems.
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