| Automate Disk Defragmentations |
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| Written by Von | |||||||||||||||||||
| Wednesday, 25 July 2007 | |||||||||||||||||||
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Defragmenting your hard drive can speed up the reading and writing of data on your hard disk. Defragging your hard drives frequently can keep the disks working at their best, but this can be a chore to remember.
For those with Windows Vista, there is a utility to enable automatic defragging. However, most people are still wise enough to delay updating until the bugs with drivers and system are ironed out. XP users can still automate the defrag process: you can let Windows' Scheduled Tasks take care of defragmenting your hard drive for you. I have covered scheduling a task previously in my guide to scheduling Synctoy, I will repeat these instructions with the relevant changes below. Scheduling a task to defrag your hard drive(s) is pretty straight forward:
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That's it, your done! Now you can forget about it and your hard drive will run at its optimum speed for as long as you keep the task. If you are having trouble getting the task to start, it is probably because the username and/or password are not correct. Look at the Last Result column in Scheduled Tasks, 0x0 means the last run was successful, 0x1 means the task didn't run (as I mention above, this is probably because of the password. If you are sure you don't want a system password for your account then you can simply check the "Run only if logged on" checkbox, this bypasses the need for a password. I can accept no responsibility for damage to your data or computer. You must understand what you are doing before attempting any of the above. Be sure to backup before trying anything.
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