Donate SIGN UP

Analyze and Defragment

Avatar Image
Haggis | 17:16 Fri 16th Sep 2011 | Computers
10 Answers
I have been told this helps with computer performance but have no idea what I am doing, can anyone put this in really simple terms for a computer idiot like me? Thanks
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 10 of 10rss feed

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by Haggis. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
Which operating system does your computer run?
Question Author
Not even sure what that means, is that Windows 7 Home Premium?
Well Win 7 is an operating system so that is probably what you have. Is your computer quite new?
Question Author
Aye, it's about 1.5yrs old. I found the Windows info somewhere so that is what I have.
Unfortunately I only know up to Win XP but I am sure that someone else will pick this thread up and advise about Win 7.
Question Author
Ok, Thanks Scotman
In which case, your hard drive's primary partition (almost certainly what you know as the C:\ drive) will be formatted using NTFS rather than FAT. Fragmentation is built into the way NTFS works, so defragging will make (next to) no difference whatsoever. As soon as the process ends and you start using the computer again, it will fragment again...
Question Author
Hey Mark, Are you saying that there is no point at all in using the defrag thingy?
Yes I am. Although it's set to run in the background, any speed increase you might experience will be minimal and (almost certainly) imperceptible.
Question Author
Fair enough, thanks for that because it has had me wondering what it is all about for quite a while!

1 to 10 of 10rss feed

Do you know the answer?

Analyze and Defragment

Answer Question >>