Re: Is there a way to defrag the MFT file and inode data?
- From: VanguardLH <V@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sun, 17 Aug 2008 18:19:02 -0500
Antonio Perez wrote:
SoCalCommie nospam@xxxxxxxxxxx wrote previously in
microsoft.public.windowsxp.hardware:
"Antonio Perez" <ap23562m@xxxxxxx> wrote in message
No... the 'real solution' is to stop worring about 'fragments'. Does your
system run faster after using the various 'tools'. If you answer yes...
you're suffering from the placibo effect.
My previous post was incomplete.
What/who/where does it say that I want/need/wish to make my computer faster?
The reasons for this request are only mine, if you were so kind to ask I
might have told you.
But the arrogance to assume what I need/should/must do is yours only.
What power/status/condition makes my opinion less
valuable/important/relevant than yours?
Is it just plain arrogance to believe/think/feel that you have the truth?
I asked correctly for help. if you want to help, do so, if not do leave.
And, in the end, It's MY computer, I'll do as I see fit.
No one asks a question for no reason. There is always an impetus.
Knowing the impetus allows a respondent to focus on that instead of
wandering all over their entire gamut of MFT knowledge.
If you asked for the correct tire pressure, there would be a purpose or
goal to your question. Maybe you want the best mileage and don't care
about heat. Maybe you're concerned about the compound used for the tire
and are concerned about heat at high speeds to ensure you don't blow the
tire apart with excessive heat. Maybe you want best traction on dry
tar. Maybe you want the best use in soft snow. Maybe you haven't a
real clue why you asked but something else prodded you into asking
because you suddenly thought it was important to know a fact without
knowing its applicability.
There was a reason for your query. You choose not to divulge. You got
prodded to divulge your reason. You still refused. Respondents can
GUESS why you asked but it could help immensely in knowing WHY you
asked. Otherwise, why bother asking here when you could've Googled for
every article discussing the topic if you didn't want to focus on WHY
you would need to defragment the MFT or HOW it might affect any
performance measure (which is still a vague topic without knowing what
measurements you expected)? Presumably you asked here to get something
more than what you found through casual searches at Google and perhaps
at Microsoft's support knowledgebase.
.
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