bronco7
January 6th 04, 12:40 AM
Clem: Or is it Mr. CLEM CADIDDLEHOPPER? You are an idiot
to think anyone would fall for thiss junk.
>-----Original Message-----
>Hi everyone,
>I would like your opinion as to the following e-mail
sent to all computer
>users at my place of employment
>Thank you for responding:
>
>THE E-MAIL;
>
>"In recent day's I have been asked numerous times how to
defrag and scandisk
>PC's with Windows XP and not having administrative
rights. Well I have
>wonderful new for those of you with this operating
system, you don't have
>to. Below you can read and exert from Microsoft
regarding defragging and
>Windows XP machines.
>
>Defrag Regularly
>
>DOS and non-NT versions of Windows do very little to
keep their file systems
>optimized. Huge gaps of free space open up in various
areas of the hard
>drive as programs and files are installed and removed;
later, other files
>are written starting at the first block of free space,
filling the gaps in
>order by sector and ending up scattered in pieces all
over the drive. When
>an operating system has to access several different
areas of a hard disk
>just to load a single file or program, performance is
severely degraded.
>
>NT kernel operating systems, like Windows XP, take
measures when used with
>the NTFS file system to keep hard disks contiguous--but
fragmentation still
>does occur. Therefore, you should defrag your XP hard
disk(s) on a regular
>basis depending on how much file juggling you do on your
PC.
>
>If you install and remove programs frequently, you
should defrag the drive
>as often as once per week. If, however, you tend to use
the same
>applications for long periods of time and you don't move
files around, you
>can get away with defragging your drives.
>
>Since we don't install and uninstalled software of these
machine on a
>regular basis and we tend to use the same software on a
daily basis, we fall
>into the portion that can get away with defragging our
systems. I hope this
>gives you' all a little more insight on your computers,
if you should have
>any question please feel free to contact me.
>
>Thank you,"
>
>
>So, what do you think?
>
>Clem
>
>
>
>.
>
to think anyone would fall for thiss junk.
>-----Original Message-----
>Hi everyone,
>I would like your opinion as to the following e-mail
sent to all computer
>users at my place of employment
>Thank you for responding:
>
>THE E-MAIL;
>
>"In recent day's I have been asked numerous times how to
defrag and scandisk
>PC's with Windows XP and not having administrative
rights. Well I have
>wonderful new for those of you with this operating
system, you don't have
>to. Below you can read and exert from Microsoft
regarding defragging and
>Windows XP machines.
>
>Defrag Regularly
>
>DOS and non-NT versions of Windows do very little to
keep their file systems
>optimized. Huge gaps of free space open up in various
areas of the hard
>drive as programs and files are installed and removed;
later, other files
>are written starting at the first block of free space,
filling the gaps in
>order by sector and ending up scattered in pieces all
over the drive. When
>an operating system has to access several different
areas of a hard disk
>just to load a single file or program, performance is
severely degraded.
>
>NT kernel operating systems, like Windows XP, take
measures when used with
>the NTFS file system to keep hard disks contiguous--but
fragmentation still
>does occur. Therefore, you should defrag your XP hard
disk(s) on a regular
>basis depending on how much file juggling you do on your
PC.
>
>If you install and remove programs frequently, you
should defrag the drive
>as often as once per week. If, however, you tend to use
the same
>applications for long periods of time and you don't move
files around, you
>can get away with defragging your drives.
>
>Since we don't install and uninstalled software of these
machine on a
>regular basis and we tend to use the same software on a
daily basis, we fall
>into the portion that can get away with defragging our
systems. I hope this
>gives you' all a little more insight on your computers,
if you should have
>any question please feel free to contact me.
>
>Thank you,"
>
>
>So, what do you think?
>
>Clem
>
>
>
>.
>