Defgragging Vista
Defgragging Vista
Had my friend defrag his Vista an hour and a half ago and it's still going but been a couple of years since he did it last. Evidently Vista defrag doesn't have a progress bar so.......is Vista like the old XP that took forever and would start over if the screensaver comes on or is it stalled out but can't tell?
Well, I just got a call and from what I can tell it has finished it's defrag. On diff he can see is that it says " defrag now". I just love Vista, eyh?
Well, I just got a call and from what I can tell it has finished it's defrag. On diff he can see is that it says " defrag now". I just love Vista, eyh?
- Krom
- DBB Database Master
- Posts: 16137
- Joined: Sun Nov 29, 1998 3:01 am
- Location: Camping the energy center. BTW, did you know you can have up to 100 characters in this location box?
- Contact:
Re: Defgragging Vista
Doesn't restart if the screen saver kicks in, just keeps right on going. But after not defragging for a couple years it is probably going to take more than one pass to really clean everything up. Defrag once a year and it takes hours and hours to finish, once a day and it takes seconds to finish.
Re: Defgragging Vista
How often should you defrag for an "average" user?
- Krom
- DBB Database Master
- Posts: 16137
- Joined: Sun Nov 29, 1998 3:01 am
- Location: Camping the energy center. BTW, did you know you can have up to 100 characters in this location box?
- Contact:
Re: Defgragging Vista
Average user, heavy user, light user; doesn't make a difference, daily works best.
Re: Defgragging Vista
*Just learned something*
I thought NTFS was supposed to be better about fragmentation than FAT. Apparently that's not really the case.
I thought NTFS was supposed to be better about fragmentation than FAT. Apparently that's not really the case.
Arch Linux x86-64, Openbox
"We'll just set a new course for that empty region over there, near that blackish, holeish thing. " Zapp Brannigan
"We'll just set a new course for that empty region over there, near that blackish, holeish thing. " Zapp Brannigan
- Krom
- DBB Database Master
- Posts: 16137
- Joined: Sun Nov 29, 1998 3:01 am
- Location: Camping the energy center. BTW, did you know you can have up to 100 characters in this location box?
- Contact:
Re: Defgragging Vista
Yeah not really, its more up to how the OS caches/performs writes and Windows isn't particularly good at avoiding fragmentation.
Re: Defgragging Vista
i have 7 Pro and i run Defraggler weekly
Re: Defgragging Vista
I know there are ext3 drivers out there for windows... does an ext3 drive being run by windows need defragmentation?
Arch Linux x86-64, Openbox
"We'll just set a new course for that empty region over there, near that blackish, holeish thing. " Zapp Brannigan
"We'll just set a new course for that empty region over there, near that blackish, holeish thing. " Zapp Brannigan
- Krom
- DBB Database Master
- Posts: 16137
- Joined: Sun Nov 29, 1998 3:01 am
- Location: Camping the energy center. BTW, did you know you can have up to 100 characters in this location box?
- Contact:
Re: Defgragging Vista
Probably:snoopy wrote:I know there are ext3 drivers out there for windows... does an ext3 drive being run by windows need defragmentation?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ext3#Defragmentation
I don't think there is a file system in existence for hard disks that doesn't eventually require defragmentation. SSDs on the other hand...
Re: Defgragging Vista
If all you're concerned about is fragmentation, then packing all of your files at the beginning of the disk is a bad idea, since packed files quickly fragment. If you make certain assumptions about rotational media, then this is sometimes an acceptable tradeoff.
- TigerRaptor
- DBB Fleet Admiral
- Posts: 2693
- Joined: Tue Feb 01, 2000 6:00 am
Re: Defgragging Vista
I defrag mine once a week with Auslogics disk defrag. It gets the job done quickly.
Re: Defgragging Vista
Krom wrote:Probably:snoopy wrote:I know there are ext3 drivers out there for windows... does an ext3 drive being run by windows need defragmentation?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ext3#Defragmentation
I don't think there is a file system in existence for hard disks that doesn't eventually require defragmentation. SSDs on the other hand...
You are correct. Ext3 suffers from fragmentation to a much lesser degree than FAT, though. Ext3 really shines when your drive is relatively empty... because there's plenty of open space into which new files can be inserted. Once the drive starts getting full, things get a lot more fragmented.
I need to get myself one of those SSD's some day.
Arch Linux x86-64, Openbox
"We'll just set a new course for that empty region over there, near that blackish, holeish thing. " Zapp Brannigan
"We'll just set a new course for that empty region over there, near that blackish, holeish thing. " Zapp Brannigan
- BUBBALOU
- DBB Benefactor
- Posts: 4198
- Joined: Tue Aug 24, 1999 2:01 am
- Location: Dallas Texas USA
- Contact:
Re: Defgragging Vista
Diskeeper's "set and forget" works well
[ Post made via iPhone ]
[ Post made via iPhone ]
I seem to have a better workout dodging your stupidity than attempting to grasp the weight of your intelligence.