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#61
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What's the best freeware defragger to use in Windows XP Pro. SP2 with limited free disk spaces? Ran JkDefrag v3.36 overnight...
Phillip
Do not despair. That is a lot better than it was. I do not know the answer to your question. I would try Defraggler. You can defragment single files. Work throgh the smaller files leaving the largest until the end. -- Hope this helps. Gerry ~~~~ FCA Stourport, England Enquire, plan and execute ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Phillip Pi" wrote in message ... FYI from its log (C: and E: look nice, but not D: 19:32:04 JkDefrag v3.36 19:32:04 Date: 2009/03/10 19:32:04 Windows version: v5.1 build 2600 Service Pack 2 19:32:04 NtfsDisableLastAccessUpdate is inactive, using LastAccessTime for SpaceHogs. ... 20:06:04 Analyzing volume 'D:\' 20:06:04 Processing 'D:\*' 20:06:04 Opening volume '\\?\Volume{1493078b-c0f3-11d9-b4e2-806d6172696f}' at mountpoint 'D:' 20:06:04 Input mask: D:\* 20:06:07 Phase 1: Analyze 20:06:07 This is an NTFS disk. 20:06:12 Phase 2: Defragment 21:30:48 Phase 3: Fixup 21:33:13 Zone 1: Fast Optimize 21:33:28 Zone 2: Fast Optimize 21:35:03 Zone 3: Fast Optimize 21:36:19 Phase 3: Fixup 21:36:36 Finished. 21:36:36 - Total disk space: 56384293888 bytes (52.5120 gigabytes), 110125574 clusters 21:36:36 - Bytes per cluster: 512 bytes 21:36:36 - Number of files: 17878 21:36:36 - Number of directories: 3384 21:36:36 - Total size of analyzed items: 47978034176 bytes (44.6830 gigabytes), 93707098 clusters 21:36:36 - Number of fragmented items: 13 (0.0611% of all items) 21:36:36 - Total size of fragmented items: 42000914944 bytes, 82033037 clusters, 87.5420% of all items, 74.4905% of disk 21:36:36 - Free disk space: 8388899840 bytes, 16384570 clusters, 14.8781% of disk 21:36:36 - Number of gaps: 769 21:36:36 - Number of small gaps: 173 (22.4967% of all gaps) 21:36:36 - Size of small gaps: 394752 bytes, 771 clusters, 0.0047% of free disk space 21:36:36 - Number of big gaps: 596 (77.5033% of all gaps) 21:36:36 - Size of big gaps: 8388505088 bytes, 16383799 clusters, 99.9953% of free disk space 21:36:36 - Average gap size: 21306.3329 clusters 21:36:36 - Biggest gap: 209554944 bytes, 409287 clusters, 2.4980% of free disk space 21:36:36 - Average end-begin distance: 2208846 clusters, 2.0058% of volume size 21:36:36 These items could not be moved: 21:36:36 Fragments Bytes Clusters Name 21:36:36 1 4096 8 D:\$MFTMirr 21:36:36 1 67108864 131072 D:\$LogFile 21:36:36 13 0 1280 D:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Application Data\Symantec\SRTSP\SrtETmp\7465EB96.TMP 21:36:36 1 8192 16 D:\. 21:36:36 143 0 17872 D:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Application Data\Symantec\SRTSP\SrtETmp\0EA02891.TMP 21:36:36 1 13765704 26887 D:\$Bitmap 21:36:36 2 5616 16 D:\$MFT::$BITMAP 21:36:36 --------- ----------- --------- ----- 21:36:36 162 80892472 177151 Total 21:36:36 These items are still fragmented: 21:36:36 Fragments Bytes Clusters Name 21:36:36 13 0 1280 D:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Application Data\Symantec\SRTSP\SrtETmp\7465EB96.TMP 21:36:36 143 0 17872 D:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Application Data\Symantec\SRTSP\SrtETmp\0EA02891.TMP 21:36:36 2 5616 16 D:\$MFT::$BITMAP 21:36:36 103 3908435968 7633664 D:\VMware5images\CleanOS\English\Windows XP Pro. SP2 (Slipstreamed CD; all updates)\Windows XP Professional-000003.vmdk 21:36:36 3 361645056 706338 D:\Documents and Settings\ppi\Local Settings\Application Data\Microsoft\Outlook\outlook.ost 21:36:36 6 268435456 524288 D:\VMware5images\CleanOS\English\Windows XP Pro. SP2 (Slipstreamed CD; all updates)\Windows XP Professional.vmem 21:36:36 307 12826968064 25052672 D:\VMware5images\CleanOS\Foreign\XP Home SP2 (Simplified Chinese) & Linux\Windows XP Home Edition.vmdk 21:36:36 11 3546349568 6926464 D:\VMware5images\CleanOS\Foreign\German XP Pro. SP2\Windows XP Professional-000002.vmdk 21:36:36 153 9777250304 19096192 D:\VMware5images\CleanOS\English\Vista Home Basic N (experimental)\Windows Vista (experimental).vmdk 21:36:36 48 1834156032 3582336 D:\VMware5images\CleanOS\Foreign\German XP Pro. SP2\Windows XP Professional.vmdk 21:36:36 92 7785938944 15206912 D:\VMware5images\CleanOS\English\Windows XP Pro. SP2 (Slipstreamed CD; all updates)\Windows XP Professional.vmdk 21:36:36 2 1681915904 3284992 D:\VMware5images\CleanOS\Foreign\French XP Pro. N SP3\Windows XP Professional.vmdk 21:36:36 --------- ----------- --------- ----- 21:36:36 883 41991100912 82033026 Total 21:36:36 The 25 largest items on disk: 21:36:36 Fragments Bytes Clusters Name 21:36:37 307 12826968064 25052672 D:\VMware5images\CleanOS\Foreign\XP Home SP2 (Simplified Chinese) & Linux\Windows XP Home Edition.vmdk 21:36:37 153 9777250304 19096192 D:\VMware5images\CleanOS\English\Vista Home Basic N (experimental)\Windows Vista (experimental).vmdk 21:36:37 92 7785938944 15206912 D:\VMware5images\CleanOS\English\Windows XP Pro. SP2 (Slipstreamed CD; all updates)\Windows XP Professional.vmdk 21:36:37 103 3908435968 7633664 D:\VMware5images\CleanOS\English\Windows XP Pro. SP2 (Slipstreamed CD; all updates)\Windows XP Professional-000003.vmdk 21:36:37 11 3546349568 6926464 D:\VMware5images\CleanOS\Foreign\German XP Pro. SP2\Windows XP Professional-000002.vmdk 21:36:37 48 1834156032 3582336 D:\VMware5images\CleanOS\Foreign\German XP Pro. SP2\Windows XP Professional.vmdk 21:36:37 2 1681915904 3284992 D:\VMware5images\CleanOS\Foreign\French XP Pro. N SP3\Windows XP Professional.vmdk 21:36:37 1 536870912 1048576 D:\VMware5images\CleanOS\English\Vista Home Basic N (experimental)\Windows Vista (experimental).vmem 21:36:37 1 489488384 956032 D:\VMware5images\CleanOS\English\Windows XP Pro. SP2 (Slipstreamed CD; all updates)\Windows XP Professional-000002.vmdk 21:36:37 3 361645056 706338 D:\Documents and Settings\ppi\Local Settings\Application Data\Microsoft\Outlook\outlook.ost 21:36:37 1 268435456 524288 D:\VMware5images\CleanOS\English\Windows XP Pro. SP2 (Slipstreamed CD; all updates)\Windows XP Professional-Snapshot377.vmem 21:36:37 6 268435456 524288 D:\VMware5images\CleanOS\English\Windows XP Pro. SP2 (Slipstreamed CD; all updates)\Windows XP Professional.vmem 21:36:37 1 268435456 524288 D:\VMware5images\CleanOS\Foreign\French XP Pro. N SP3\Windows XP Professional.vmem 21:36:37 1 268435456 524288 D:\VMware5images\CleanOS\Foreign\German XP Pro. SP2\Windows XP Professional-Snapshot29.vmem 21:36:37 1 268435456 524288 D:\VMware5images\CleanOS\Foreign\German XP Pro. SP2\Windows XP Professional.vmem 21:36:37 1 268435456 524288 D:\VMware5images\CleanOS\Foreign\XP Home SP2 (Simplified Chinese) & Linux\564dd13e-6e47-0535-8f0e-4314c9073873.vmem 21:36:37 1 268435456 524288 D:\VMware5images\CleanOS\Foreign\XP Home SP2 (Simplified Chinese) & Linux\Windows XP Home Edition-Snapshot7.vmem 21:36:37 1 268435456 524288 D:\VMware5images\CleanOS\Foreign\XP Home SP2 (Simplified Chinese) & Linux\Windows XP Home Edition.vmem 21:36:37 1 163053568 318464 D:\lotus\notes\Data\mail\ppi.nsf 21:36:37 1 67605683 132043 D:\work\tools\B134A.exe 21:36:37 1 67108864 131072 D:\$LogFile 21:36:37 1 63138613 123318 D:\work\tools\RM.exe 21:36:37 1 45957120 89760 D:\$MFT 21:36:37 1 43473926 84911 D:\Documents and Settings\All Users\Application Data\Spybot - Search & Destroy\Backups\regUsers.reg 21:36:37 1 39553196 77253 D:\Temp\Release.tmf -- MS Defrag Analysis: Volume DATA (D Volume size = 52.51 GB Cluster size = 512 bytes Used space = 44.67 GB Free space = 7.84 GB Percent free space = 14 % Volume fragmentation Total fragmentation = 43 % File fragmentation = 87 % Free space fragmentation = 0 % File fragmentation Total files = 17,408 Average file size = 3 MB Total fragmented files = 20 Total excess fragments = 904 Average fragments per file = 1.05 Pagefile fragmentation Pagefile size = 0 bytes Total fragments = 0 Folder fragmentation Total folders = 3,236 Fragmented folders = 1 Excess folder fragments = 0 Master File Table (MFT) fragmentation Total MFT size = 44 MB MFT record count = 21,089 Percent MFT in use = 46 % Total MFT fragments = 2 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Fragments File Size Most fragmented files 315 11.95 GB \VMware5images\CleanOS\Foreign\XP Home SP2 (Simplified Chinese) & Linux\Windows XP Home Edition.vmdk 153 9.11 GB \VMware5images\CleanOS\English\Vista Home Basic N (experimental)\Windows Vista (experimental).vmdk 143 0 bytes \Documents and Settings\All Users\Application Data\Symantec\SRTSP\SrtETmp\0EA02891.TMP 103 3.64 GB \VMware5images\CleanOS\English\Windows XP Pro. SP2 (Slipstreamed CD; all updates)\Windows XP Professional-000003.vmdk 92 7.25 GB \VMware5images\CleanOS\English\Windows XP Pro. SP2 (Slipstreamed CD; all updates)\Windows XP Professional.vmdk 48 1.71 GB \VMware5images\CleanOS\Foreign\German XP Pro. SP2\Windows XP Professional.vmdk 13 0 bytes \Documents and Settings\All Users\Application Data\Symantec\SRTSP\SrtETmp\7465EB96.TMP 11 3.30 GB \VMware5images\CleanOS\Foreign\German XP Pro. SP2\Windows XP Professional-000002.vmdk 10 17 KB \work\tools\JkDefrag-3.36\JkDefrag.log 6 256 MB \VMware5images\CleanOS\English\Windows XP Pro. SP2 (Slipstreamed CD; all updates)\Windows XP Professional.vmem 4 64 KB \Documents and Settings\All Users\Application Data\Spybot - Search & Destroy\Logs\Update downloads.log 4 128 KB \VMware5images\CleanOS\English\Windows XP Pro. SP2 (Slipstreamed CD; all updates)\2nd Smaller HDD-000004.vmdk 4 1 MB \VMware5images\CleanOS\English\Windows XP Pro. SP2 (Slipstreamed CD; all updates)\Windows XP Professional-000004.vmdk 4 8 KB \VMware5images\CleanOS\English\Windows XP Pro. SP2 (Slipstreamed CD; all updates)\Windows XP Professional.nvram 3 345 MB \Documents and Settings\ppi\Local Settings\Application Data\Microsoft\Outlook\outlook.ost 3 20 KB \RECYCLER\S-1-5-21-746137067-308236825-682003330-35013\INFO2 2 1.57 GB \VMware5images\CleanOS\Foreign\French XP Pro. N SP3\Windows XP Professional.vmdk 2 1 KB \VMware5images\CleanOS\English\Windows XP Pro. SP2 (Slipstreamed CD; all updates)\Windows XP Professional.vmx 2 32 KB \Documents and Settings\ppi\Local Settings\History\History.IE5\MSHist012009031120090 312\index.dat 2 2 KB \Documents and Settings\ppi\Application Data\VMware\favorites.vmls Does this program or MS' defragger have an offline defragger (reboot, defrag, and back to Windows)? I recalled PerfectDisk has this feature. Thank you in advance. -- Phillip Pi (aka Ant) Senior Software Quality Assurance Analyst ISP/Symantec Online Services, Consumer Business Unit Symantec Corporation www.symantec.com ----------------------------------------------------- Email: YMC (remove SYMC to reply by e-mail) ----------------------------------------------------- Please do NOT e-mail me for technical support. DISCLAIMER: The views expressed in this posting are mine, and do not necessarily reflect the views of my employer. Thank you. |
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#62
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What's the best freeware defragger to use in Windows XP Pro. SP2 with limited free disk spaces?
BillW50 wrote:
In , Gerry typed on Mon, 9 Mar 2009 23:18:38 -0000: Phillip I can see why you are having problems. The first thing is that volumes C and D do not have the normal 4 kb cluster size. This can occur in certain situations if they are converted from FAT32 to NTFS without taking precautions. See the link which follows: http://www.aumha.org/win5/a/ntfscvt.htm The Default Cluster Size for the NTFS and FAT File Systems http://support.microsoft.com/kb/314878/en-us Other than reformatting I do not know how to correct the error. Of course with your C volume that involves reinstalling Windows XP and all that entails... I disagree! I have used NTFS 512kb clusters before and I see nothing wrong with them. Also Partition Magic can change the cluster sizes on the fly. Although *not* always successfully I might add. -- Bill 2 Gateway MX6124 - Windows XP SP2 3 Asus EEE PC 701G4 ~ 2GB RAM ~ 16GB-SDHC 2 Asus EEE PC 702G8 ~ 1GB RAM ~ 16GB-SDHC Windows XP SP2 ~ Xandros Linux - Puppy - Ubuntu Are you sure you mean 512KB, and not 512 byte? I think you mean 512 byte. |
#63
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What's the best freeware defragger to use in Windows XP Pro. SP2 with limited free disk spaces?
Philip
With SP2 a big aid to success was to use an SP2 CD. You lost the hassle of a long download. -- Gerry ~~~~ FCA Stourport, England Enquire, plan and execute ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Phillip Pi" wrote in message ... On 3/11/2009 8:09 AM PT, Gerry wrote: Upgrading to SP2 and to SP3 caused no problems here. Reading these newsgroups one would think both were disaster because the large number of problems reported but this is the nature of news today. You here about everything that goes wrong and less often about the successes. Same here on my most of test PCs and home PCs. I do make backups before I do them just in case. One time, I had a laptop/notebook's SP1 to SP2 crashed, but it was fine after I resumed. It was a known issue (can't remember the details since it was back in 2006 or so). -- Phillip Pi (aka Ant) Senior Software Quality Assurance Analyst ISP/Symantec Online Services, Consumer Business Unit Symantec Corporation www.symantec.com ----------------------------------------------------- Email: YMC (remove SYMC to reply by e-mail) ----------------------------------------------------- Please do NOT e-mail me for technical support. DISCLAIMER: The views expressed in this posting are mine, and do not necessarily reflect the views of my employer. Thank you. |
#64
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What's the best freeware defragger to use in Windows XP Pro. SP2 with limited free disk spaces?
Yes my slip Hawkeye.
-- Gerry ~~~~ FCA Stourport, England Enquire, plan and execute ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Bill in Co." wrote in message ... BillW50 wrote: In , Gerry typed on Mon, 9 Mar 2009 23:18:38 -0000: Phillip I can see why you are having problems. The first thing is that volumes C and D do not have the normal 4 kb cluster size. This can occur in certain situations if they are converted from FAT32 to NTFS without taking precautions. See the link which follows: http://www.aumha.org/win5/a/ntfscvt.htm The Default Cluster Size for the NTFS and FAT File Systems http://support.microsoft.com/kb/314878/en-us Other than reformatting I do not know how to correct the error. Of course with your C volume that involves reinstalling Windows XP and all that entails... I disagree! I have used NTFS 512kb clusters before and I see nothing wrong with them. Also Partition Magic can change the cluster sizes on the fly. Although *not* always successfully I might add. -- Bill 2 Gateway MX6124 - Windows XP SP2 3 Asus EEE PC 701G4 ~ 2GB RAM ~ 16GB-SDHC 2 Asus EEE PC 702G8 ~ 1GB RAM ~ 16GB-SDHC Windows XP SP2 ~ Xandros Linux - Puppy - Ubuntu Are you sure you mean 512KB, and not 512 byte? I think you mean 512 byte. |
#65
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What's the best freeware defragger to use in Windows XP Pro.SP2 with limited free disk spaces?
The date and time was Wednesday, March 11, 2009 8:23:08 AM, and on a
whim, Gerry pounded out on the keyboard: Terry I do read all posts in a thread I participate in so I knew who said what. I would agree that Microsoft should have explained how to use System Restore better. In the majority of cases before the changes to the third party security software I suspect it worked in the majority of cases. However the changes Norton made to their software created problems for the millions of users using Norton software. Blame Norton not Microsoft. Do you recommend Norton software to your clients? It's not how to use SR, it needs to work better and more reliably, probably self-diagnosing and self-healing, so when it's called on in a moments notice, it can perform the task. I stopped recommending NAV back in 2002, although the corporate edition for servers and networks works well. After everything I have read recently about NAV, it appears Symantec may have corrected the issues that drove users away for years. But it's almost too late IMO. I recommend and install Antivir for individual clients. Terry R. -- Anti-spam measures are included in my email address. Delete NOSPAM from the email address after clicking Reply. |
#66
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What's the best freeware defragger to use in Windows XP Pro.SP2 with limited free disk spaces?
The date and time was Wednesday, March 11, 2009 9:05:28 AM, and on a
whim, BillW50 pounded out on the keyboard: I don't understand why big companies have to take their systems down for maintenance or system failures. Talk to MS about that. Installing WU usually requires rebooting, including servers. Terry R. -- Anti-spam measures are included in my email address. Delete NOSPAM from the email address after clicking Reply. |
#67
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What's the best freeware defragger to use in Windows XP Pro.SP2 with limited free disk spaces?
The date and time was Wednesday, March 11, 2009 9:50:39 AM, and on a
whim, BillW50 pounded out on the keyboard: In , Terry R. typed on Wed, 11 Mar 2009 07:54:29 -0700: The date and time was Wednesday, March 11, 2009 5:49:45 AM, and on a whim, BillW50 pounded out on the keyboard: In , Terry R. typed on Tue, 10 Mar 2009 15:38:23 -0700: ... I keep SR turned off all the time. The main reason is SR has failed me and too many clients when it was really needed, so it's a false sense of security IMO, so why depend on it at all. Strange! It has saved my and millions of others all of the time. You can speak for yourself. "Millions of others" I seriously doubt. And I wouldn't be making false claims of it's usefulness without experience. I help people all of the time, and 99% of the time it fixes the problem. Couple my experience times millions, it has to be in the millions. Again, you can't "couple experience". Stating millions is your guess. A good backup schedule is by far the best protection. Software backups are totally useless if your hardware fails. So that isn't a good plan in my book. Only software and hardware backups are the only way to go IMHO. Did I say software only? No. What's your point? On my workstation I have 3 internal hard drives with partition copies of my OS's, data and programs between the three, data drive backed up to another drive each day. I have 3 external drives that I also back up too. On networks I admin, our servers always use RAID 5 and weekly rotating tape backups, along with Shadowing. Who are you preaching to? You rely on SR and I'll stick to what I know works, okay? Useless if your monitor, CPU, RAM, motherboard, power supply, etc. fails. Then your backups won't do you any good, now will they? I don't care what kind of warrantee or service contract you have, they can never beat my system. As I am always back up and running in seconds or two minutes tops. The backups do exactly what they're designed to do. I don't care if the items you list go bad. NO ONE can do anything about hardware failing. It happens. Your argument is ridiculous in light of having a good backup schedule. You think because you buy two of everything you're covered? Good luck with that, and the wasted expense. Terry R. -- Anti-spam measures are included in my email address. Delete NOSPAM from the email address after clicking Reply. |
#68
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What's the best freeware defragger to use in Windows XP Pro. S
Jose,
I apologize for posting off topic here, but a reply to your post is right on target. I am responsible for maintaining 38 computers here, and SP3 has turned 21 of them into electric paper weights. This software was deployed after waiting months to allow it to be fixed. Well you could have fooled me by all the GOOD reports about it being safe to install this poorly written software. Thanks Microsoft, for all the extra overtime I will now have to put in, in order to correct your premature publication of a (so called) "Critical" update. My advice on SP3 is don't bother installing it, unless you like to gamble with your companies time and resources. SP3 may work for some SYSTEMS, but it is it far from prime time ready. "Jose" wrote: On Mar 7, 12:09 pm, "Patrick Keenan" wrote: "Ant" wrote in message ... Hello. Yesterday, I was defragging my office computer with XP Pro. SP2's default disk defragger, but it was too fragmented with many huge files (mostly VMware v5.5.9 images) and had limited free disk spaces. Are there any better ones that doesn't cost a cent? My PC feels slower and I think it is because of the severe fragmentations. It's the one that comes with XP. This won't run with less than 15% free space, and if your drive is that cramped, you should move files elsewhere. Get another hard drive to store the VMware images. Where I am, half-terabyte drives are under $100, decent cases around $30, and that would end your problem for some time. If this is an office computer, it's probably a tax-deductible business expense. HTH -pk Thank you in advance. -- "An ant's nest could bring down a hill." --Japanese /\___/\ / /\ /\ \ Phil/Ant @http://antfarm.ma.cx(Personal Web Site) | |o o| | Ant's Quality Foraged Links (AQFL):http://aqfl.net \ _ / Nuke ANT from e-mail address: ( ) or Ant is currently not listening to any songs on his home computer. Is this your desktop computer your office computer? Why are you not running SP3? Why are so many that people that post problems here not even current on software updates that are free and highly recommended? You are not current on your MS software. Your IT people, or somebody you probably know, needs to fix this. I don't know of too many people that are going to be happy to help you figure out why old software does not work as you expect it to or believe it should. Why do you have think you have VMWare images on your office computer? Are you the VMWare administrator? Do you keep VMWare images on your personal desktop computer? Do you know what a VMWare image is or do you just see some big files that don't want to defragment and you think they should? VMWare usually runs on a separate and powerful VMWare server and supplies the resources of an actual physical servers (boxes) as virtual machines where physical servers are not available or possible due to cost, environmental or personality factors. is your desktop a VMWare server? If you want VMWare to be happy, a VMWare server should be dedicated to being a VMWare server only - happy with it's virtual machines and not much else. You should not be touching it or defragmenting it if you don't know what you are up to. Do any of these situations apply to your environment? Do you have a VMWare problem or is your desktop just not performing to your expectations? |
#69
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What's the best freeware defragger to use in Windows XP Pro. SP2 with limited free disk spaces?
Terry
I have read others saying what you have regarding the Corporate Edition. No further changes will be made to System Restore in Windows XP. The function in Vista has changes but not liking Vista I have not studied how it works. -- Gerry ~~~~ FCA Stourport, England Enquire, plan and execute ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Terry R." wrote in message ... The date and time was Wednesday, March 11, 2009 8:23:08 AM, and on a whim, Gerry pounded out on the keyboard: Terry I do read all posts in a thread I participate in so I knew who said what. I would agree that Microsoft should have explained how to use System Restore better. In the majority of cases before the changes to the third party security software I suspect it worked in the majority of cases. However the changes Norton made to their software created problems for the millions of users using Norton software. Blame Norton not Microsoft. Do you recommend Norton software to your clients? It's not how to use SR, it needs to work better and more reliably, probably self-diagnosing and self-healing, so when it's called on in a moments notice, it can perform the task. I stopped recommending NAV back in 2002, although the corporate edition for servers and networks works well. After everything I have read recently about NAV, it appears Symantec may have corrected the issues that drove users away for years. But it's almost too late IMO. I recommend and install Antivir for individual clients. Terry R. -- Anti-spam measures are included in my email address. Delete NOSPAM from the email address after clicking Reply. |
#70
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What's the best freeware defragger to use in Windows XP Pro. SP2 with limited free disk spaces?
Why are there multiple separate posts on this with just some slight
variations in the subject line? One subject line for it is quite enough. Ant wrote: Hello. Yesterday, I was defragging my office computer with XP Pro. SP2's default disk defragger, but it was too fragmented with many huge files (mostly VMware v5.5.9 images) and had limited free disk spaces. Are there any better ones that doesn't cost a cent? My PC feels slower and I think it is because of the severe fragmentations. Thank you in advance. -- "An ant's nest could bring down a hill." --Japanese /\___/\ / /\ /\ \ Phil/Ant @ http://antfarm.ma.cx (Personal Web Site) | |o o| | Ant's Quality Foraged Links (AQFL): http://aqfl.net \ _ / Nuke ANT from e-mail address: NT ( ) or Ant is currently not listening to any songs on his home computer. |
#71
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What's the best freeware defragger to use in Windows XP Pro.SP2 with limited free disk spaces? Ran JkDefrag v3.36 overnight...
OK, I will try Defraggler then.
On 3/11/2009 11:32 AM PT, Gerry typed: Phillip Do not despair. That is a lot better than it was. I do not know the answer to your question. I would try Defraggler. You can defragment single files. Work throgh the smaller files leaving the largest until the end. -- "Ants can lift up to 50 times their own weight. And your monitor is missing. Time to bring out the bugspray." --BBspot's Geek Horoscopes (2/28/2003) /\___/\ / /\ /\ \ Phil/Ant @ http://antfarm.ma.cx (Personal Web Site) | |o o| | Ant's Quality Foraged Links (AQFL): http://aqfl.net \ _ / Nuke ANT from e-mail address: NT ( ) or Ant is currently not listening to any songs on his home computer. |
#72
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What's the best freeware defragger to use in Windows XP Pro. S
Suggest you find the problem instead of blaming Microsoft.
"Phil" wrote in message ... Jose, I apologize for posting off topic here, but a reply to your post is right on target. I am responsible for maintaining 38 computers here, and SP3 has turned 21 of them into electric paper weights. This software was deployed after waiting months to allow it to be fixed. Well you could have fooled me by all the GOOD reports about it being safe to install this poorly written software. Thanks Microsoft, for all the extra overtime I will now have to put in, in order to correct your premature publication of a (so called) "Critical" update. My advice on SP3 is don't bother installing it, unless you like to gamble with your companies time and resources. SP3 may work for some SYSTEMS, but it is it far from prime time ready. "Jose" wrote: On Mar 7, 12:09 pm, "Patrick Keenan" wrote: "Ant" wrote in message ... Hello. Yesterday, I was defragging my office computer with XP Pro. SP2's default disk defragger, but it was too fragmented with many huge files (mostly VMware v5.5.9 images) and had limited free disk spaces. Are there any better ones that doesn't cost a cent? My PC feels slower and I think it is because of the severe fragmentations. It's the one that comes with XP. This won't run with less than 15% free space, and if your drive is that cramped, you should move files elsewhere. Get another hard drive to store the VMware images. Where I am, half-terabyte drives are under $100, decent cases around $30, and that would end your problem for some time. If this is an office computer, it's probably a tax-deductible business expense. HTH -pk Thank you in advance. -- "An ant's nest could bring down a hill." --Japanese /\___/\ / /\ /\ \ Phil/Ant @http://antfarm.ma.cx(Personal Web Site) | |o o| | Ant's Quality Foraged Links (AQFL):http://aqfl.net \ _ / Nuke ANT from e-mail address: ( ) or Ant is currently not listening to any songs on his home computer. Is this your desktop computer your office computer? Why are you not running SP3? Why are so many that people that post problems here not even current on software updates that are free and highly recommended? You are not current on your MS software. Your IT people, or somebody you probably know, needs to fix this. I don't know of too many people that are going to be happy to help you figure out why old software does not work as you expect it to or believe it should. Why do you have think you have VMWare images on your office computer? Are you the VMWare administrator? Do you keep VMWare images on your personal desktop computer? Do you know what a VMWare image is or do you just see some big files that don't want to defragment and you think they should? VMWare usually runs on a separate and powerful VMWare server and supplies the resources of an actual physical servers (boxes) as virtual machines where physical servers are not available or possible due to cost, environmental or personality factors. is your desktop a VMWare server? If you want VMWare to be happy, a VMWare server should be dedicated to being a VMWare server only - happy with it's virtual machines and not much else. You should not be touching it or defragmenting it if you don't know what you are up to. Do any of these situations apply to your environment? Do you have a VMWare problem or is your desktop just not performing to your expectations? |
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What's the best freeware defragger to use in Windows XP Pro.SP2 with limited free disk spaces?
The date and time was Wednesday, March 11, 2009 10:01:34 PM, and on a
whim, Bill in Co. pounded out on the keyboard: Why are there multiple separate posts on this with just some slight variations in the subject line? One subject line for it is quite enough. There is only one thread I see, and the same subject for all. I have seen reported issues of Google Groupers who reply in a thread, and when another newsreader replies to a GG'er, Google folds References headers and it adds tab characters to them. AFAIK, that should never happen -- it's a bug with Google. Then when a "good newsreader" unfolds the headers in a reply, it leaves extra whitespace in the places where the tabs were. Some people have called this a bug, but IMO, it's not -- it's just GIGO, with the garbage initiated at GG. Then when Google parses the header in a further reply, it chokes on the whitespace characters (which shouldn't be there) in the unfolded header and creates an even more invalid header, in which most of the message-ids are gone and the one that remains has no angled brackets. It's only at that last stage that the newsreader can no longer thread the messages properly. So this problem only happens when there are more than one post in the thread already, then a Google Grouper replies, then a newsreader user replies to the GGer, then the GGer replies back. Whew! Terry R. -- Anti-spam measures are included in my email address. Delete NOSPAM from the email address after clicking Reply. |
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What's the best freeware defragger to use in Windows XP Pro. SP2 with limited free disk spaces?
"Terry R." wrote in message
... The date and time was Wednesday, March 11, 2009 10:01:34 PM, and on a whim, Bill in Co. pounded out on the keyboard: Why are there multiple separate posts on this with just some slight variations in the subject line? One subject line for it is quite enough. There is only one thread I see, and the same subject for all. There's at least two - this one, with this subject line "What's the best freeware defragger to use in Windows XP Pro. SP2 with limited free disk spaces?" and one with the subject line of "What's the best freeware defragger to use in Windows XP Pro. S" Notice the difference? -- Asking a question? Please tell us the version of the application you are asking about, your OS, Service Pack level and the FULL contents of any error message(s) |
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What's the best freeware defragger to use in Windows XP Pro. S
"Unknown" wrote in message
... Suggest you find the problem instead of blaming Microsoft. Can't see the OP, but if he's RESPONSIBLE (?) for many machines, surely he TESTED it first? -- Asking a question? Please tell us the version of the application you are asking about, your OS, Service Pack level and the FULL contents of any error message(s) |
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