Re: Partition size
- From: "Terry R." <F1Com@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sat, 22 Aug 2009 15:57:29 -0700
The date and time was Saturday, August 22, 2009 2:56:23 PM , and on a whim, BillW50 pounded out on the keyboard:
In news:ezLEVv2IKHA.1340@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx,
Terry R. typed on Sat, 22 Aug 2009 14:02:18 -0700:
The date and time was Saturday, August 22, 2009 12:19:49 PM , and on a
whim, BillW50 pounded out on the keyboard:
In news:Ob7zEm1IKHA.1376@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx,You didn't plan the 10MB, that was all there was most likely. I first
Terry R. typed on Sat, 22 Aug 2009 11:51:11 -0700:
The date and time was Saturday, August 22, 2009 8:48:30 AM , and onPlanning? I planned and my first HDD was 10MB in size. And I planned
a whim, BillW50 pounded out on the keyboard:
In news:%23Of6QWxIKHA.4628@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx,Proper planning is key. My OS partitions are between 5 & 7 gig. My
Ron Badour typed on Sat, 22 Aug 2009 05:44:53 -0500:
There are some benefits to having multiple partitions.Plus many negative ones. Like I have 5GB free on C, 15GB free on D,
and 15GB free on W. And I need 20GB free to edit a video file.
Oops! I can't do it even though I have 35GB free on the drive.
<sigh>
data partitions (separate drives) can be enlarged at any time as I
keep empty space available and don't place any backup partitions
next to the data partitions. I do a lot of video work and use the
larger partitions to work on a project, then I move the files to two
different external media so I have 2 copies of everything, and
nothing on the workstation.
that is all I would ever need. Like that lasted very long. Today I
didn't plan on editing a video file and the program needs 20GB of
space to edit it. Nor did I ever plan on buying X-Plane which eats
up 60GB of space. The truth is Terry, planning just doesn't work
very well! All you can plan for is the unexpected. And partitioning
is a very poor plan!
purchased a Tallgrass 20/20 that was a 20MB hard drive and a 20MG tape
backup, which was the largest available at the time. When the
computer was retired, the drive wasn't full and it was in operation
until 1992.
Well kind of close to the truth so I'll give you that one. <grin>
My hard drives now have empty space next to any partition that may
need to expand. If I need to do that, I can enlarge it and be fine
for another year or two. Since I have multiple backup partitions
throughout the 3 hard drives, I planned this very well. If I needed
another 20 gig for something, I could have it right now. Planning
works well and partitioning IS a good plan. Just because it didn't
work for you doesn't mean it doesn't work at all.
Just because it works for you doesn't mean it will work for others. Let's say I got you interested in X-Plane that needs 60GB. Now what will you do?
I have plenty of empty space on these drives. If I wanted to, I could slide a partition over if needed, but I could do 60GB easily.
Scramble a hard drive with contiguous clusters and one heavilyOkay, but even still no defragging is even faster. So what's theThat's not what he said. A 7 gig partition will take a lot lessdefragging, etc., on separate partitions cuts down on running timeThere is no data that exists that supports this claim at all! A
and hard drive wear.
hard drive doesn't care where it is writing or reading. At worst,
all it changes is seek time and nothing else. And that isn't very
important anyway since hard drives comes with buffers for years.
time than a 50 gig partition to defrag. Wear is relevant in this
issue I don't think.
point?
fragmented and see which one is easier to retrieve files on. Sure it's
no biggie if there is a current backup, but all to many clients I have
(and friends and relatives) DON'T have backups or don't do them
regularly, regardless if they've been told.
Yeah well we can't help people who don't listen. Many don't plan for a disaster and don't care until it happens.
Yes, but a defragged drive would have a better success rate at retrieving data than a highly fragmented disk.
I don't see it that way. And I will continue to defrag. You feelCould be. I believe even the worst fragged HDD doesn't slow down muchI also *only* defrag my hard drives once every 2 years. I recordI think defragging is mainly for those who like things organized.
the boot time before the defrag and after the defrag. The time
difference is minimal and wasn't even worth all of the time it had
taken to defrag in the first place.
since the I/O is the real bottleneck anyway. But virtually nobody
brings this up at all. And if I am right, people defragging their
HDD is just wasting their time anyway.
differently.
You can, but I don't know why? Back in the 80's drives were formatted as MFM and were very slow. Defragging them made a *huge* difference! And here is where all of this *must* defrag stuff got started IMHO. As when IDE drives came out in the 90's, it made little difference. And today manufactures has worked a couple of decades of eliminating the poor seek time. And I feel they have done a fine job and defragging is virtually not necessary for almost anybody.
Regardless, defragging is far from "one of the worst conditions youYeah! At least with video editing you *are* actually accomplishingAnd if you are a believer in lots of reading and writing all overAnd video editing doesn't do the same? When I'm rendering video, it
the place is lots of wear and tear on your hard drive. Then
defragging all of the time is one of the worst things you can do.
As the head is flying all over the place, the drive heats up
higher than it normally does, and it is reading and writing
virtually everything on the drive all over again. This is one of
the worst conditions you can do to a drive!
can take 5 to 6 hours or longer and the hard drives are thrashing
away the whole time. That stresses a drive countless times more
than defragging.
something.
can do to a drive".
I disagree. It is the most useless hard activity you can do to a drive. Some people swear they see improvements. Well if they see it, I say fine. But if you don't and I haven't for the passed 20 years, I don't see the point.
You already agreed that video editing stresses a disk far more than defragging. Just because you think defragging useless doesn't make it stress a disk more. It doesn't. I don't know anything that stresses a disk more than video editing. And I never said I didn't see benefit from it. I do.
Having that luxury is nice. But I can't keep multiple workstationsSounds okay by me. I have a different method though. As I am a bigI support multiple drives AND multiple partitions. My workstationKeeping your applications on another partition can save data ifIf you don't back up, you lose everything if the drive fails to
you have a system problem and you did not get some data backed up.
spin. So it is your fault, whether you use partitions or not.
Others will tell you that multiple partitions are not required butYou haven't made one reasonable point for supporting multiple
what it boils down to is personal preference.
partitions yet. So why should anybody bother?
is over 5 years old and it outperforms single drive duo core
machines easily. It boots to a Desktop in under 30 seconds (yes,
processes are still loading afterwards, and that includes
PageDefrag on every boot).
believer in multiple computers. And I buy the same models so I can
always swap parts to troubleshoot or get something up and running
within seconds in most cases (no computer service that money can buy
could offer better). And backups are not that important since
everything is generally cloned or close to cloned anyway. And if one
computer is overwhelmed by one very busy application, no big deal. I
just fire up another one. <grin>
like this one around. Your netbooks are fine if that's all you need.
It's much easier to have my 3 hard drives and be able to get back to
work in 30 minutes if a drive dies.
I have 5 netbooks and two laptops I use regularly. I gave up on desktops about 5 years ago. And I usually only use one at a time. So if one goes down, needs to reboot to update or something, it just isn't a problem. I just grab another one. Life seems so simple to me.
Keeping them all updated the same doesn't seem simple. It's much simpler to have one good machine and have confidence in your backup plan.
And what video editing do you do on any of them? I don't know any laptops able to do a lot of video editing/rendering other than the priciest of them, which I doubt yours are. And I'm sure lap-tots aren't up to it.
Terry R.
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