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Is
your computer running slow? Is it locking up on you?
Are programs suddenly terminating?
Perhaps it's time to Defrag!
When you "defrag" your hard
drive, you run a disk defragmentor program to optimize
the placement of files on your hard drive. Here's
what happens. As you use your computer, it writes
to the first available spot on the hard drive. Over
time, files tend to get rearranged on your hard disk,
or fragmented.
If your disk is fragmented, when it
tried to load a program, it may have to grab one file
from the middle of the hard drive, one towards the
outside, then back to the inside. The net result is
that you computer runs slower.
When you run a defrag program, it
puts the pieces back together, organizes them in similar
groupings, so stuff loads faster. It's probably a
good idea for the average user to defrag once every
2-3 months or so.
Warning - Be careful when running
defrag. First off, it takes a long time (I usually
run it at night) to defragment a large hard drive
(3 meg or higher). Also, the defrag program takes
files off your hard drive and sticks them into your
system RAM while it's reorganizing your disk. If you
lose power during a disk defragmentation, it can spell
disaster for your computer. At best you'll mess up
a program or two and at worst you may no longer be
able to access your hard drive and Windows. Definitely
not something to do during a thunderstorm!
History
Defrag became a major utility with MS-DOS 5/6. It
was faster than Optimize, had a Semi-GUI interface,
and you would actually notice performance improvements
after running it. Defrag has improved over time, but
then it came to a standstill with Windows NT/2000.
While Intel wrote the 95/98 Defrag, the Windows NT
and 2000 versions were written from Executive Software's
Diskeeper. Because Diskeeper was written for servers,
it is a very product, which translates to“it
is slow. Unfortunately, its benefits are no greater
than the Defrag written for earlier operating systems.
Enough already! Now, how do I defragment
my hard drive?
First, you need to run Scandisk.
Windows 95/98/ME Users:
Click on the Start Menu then select Programs, Accessories,
System Tools, then Scandisk . Select the drive you
would like to check, then select the type of test
you would like to run (standard or thorough). Finally,
click Start .
Windows
NT/2000/XP Users:
Double click your My Computer icon. Right click on
the C: drive. Select Properties then choose the Tools
tab . Under Error Checking , click the Check Now button.
A dialog box will pop up, check both check boxes and
click Start

A dialog box will pop up telling you,
"The disk check could not be performed because
exclusive access to the drive could not be obtained.
Do you want this disk check to be scheduled the next
time you restart the computer?" (I don't know
why you would go through all of this if you didn't
want to click ‘yes'
and why Microsoft held this over with 2000 and XP,
but in their infinite wisdom they did! There may be
good reasons to back down now but I can't think of
any, so…)
Boldly click the Yes button! I guarantee
it won't hurt a bit.
Now, on to the Disk Defragmenter
Make sure all Antivirus software is
disabled along with any background applications that
may write to the hard drive which you are defragmenting.
Click
on the Start Menu, Programs, Accessories, System Tools
, and select the Disk Defragmenter . Select/highlight
the drive you want to defrag and click Defragment
.

Easy as that! Now just step back and
let her organize your hard drive. If only you could
Defrag your house |