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Thread ID: 100631 2009-06-15 01:10:00 Defragmenting My C drive JohnnyR (9277) Press F1
Post ID Timestamp Content User
782349 2009-06-18 13:59:00 Hi JohnnyR

Many people believe defragmentation is not required . That may or may not be but if like me then you like to have things nice and tidy then do a defrag .


The files on my C drive are so scrambled the Windows defragmenter can't acheive a lot .
Think your enquiry is a very good reason to defrag once in a while .

Others have given you links to many good defraggers here's one more with a difference . It is a suite of tools to clean, optimise, protect and defrag all by one click of the mouse!!

You can't beat ADVANCED WINDOWS CARE ( . cnet . com/Advanced-SystemCare-Free/3000-2086_4-10407614 . html" target="_blank">download . cnet . com) . Has iobit's Smart Defrag built in . It's free, wot yah got to lose!!

BURNZEE
Burnzee (6950)
782350 2009-06-19 12:41:00 Hi JohnnyR

Many people believe defragmentation is not required . That may or may not be but if like me then you like to have things nice and tidy then do a defrag .

BURNZEE

I used to think defragmentation was overrated too . . . but I've seen some WinXP NTFS drives lately that were a real mess . The drive might have 5Gb free space which sounded OK till you look at the drive map and the free space is so fragmented itself that the system runs slower than molasses (17 minutes to load Sims 1!) It seems if space is tight on a drive there is much more likelihood of it needing defragmented . :2cents:
Rod J (451)
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