We're going to keep this thread going
I've enjoyed all the 1 liners from the peanut gallery. Keep em coming.
As for the defrag issue..I dug into it a little more and found some interesting responses from some qualified people.
Thoughts:
#1 "Comment from pjedmond" feedback
Date: 02/15/2005 01:27AM PST Comment
As to whether it is possible to make a a system crash:
It shouldn't be.....*but*......fragmentation leads to the greater use of system resources in order to recover the information, so it is possible that a 'poorly behaved' program could crash as a result of it not getting the information that it needs in the expected timescale, or due to resources available not being quite right'.
As for the hard drive itself, modern hard drives are fairly robust and should be able to cope with this, but moving the head around creates heat, continuous movement of the head (especially from one extreme to another) is more likely to cause a 'skip' and give you a read error, which may cause a problem. (Butterfly read tests deliberately test for this type of thing in disc diagnostic packages). .....but if the drive is new and not been abused (dropped), then it should be OK.
The bottom line is that systems are so complex, it is virtually impossible to point the finger at a single aspect that is causing a problem in this type of scenario. However, because the systems are so complex, this is one area where the 'added complexity' caused by the disc fragmentation could have an effect as it is unlikely that the rest of the operating system and applications can get tested comprehensively for this type of thing. If you appear to have a problem, then fragmentation is resolveable, and you might as well defrag before trying more expensive solutions.
HTH
#2 Comment from SoyYop feedback
Date: 02/15/2005 04:21AM PST
Comment:
If your harddsk is failing, some extra work could lead to a raise in temperture. That leads to an expansion in the disc plates, and that could lead -on a failing or overheated hard disk" to the OS to be unable to read some sectors.
I've ruined an old HD with NT4 years ago using a defragmentation program over night. Fatigue and overheat could ruin them.
Yes, it may be related. Sometimes, the hard disk just can't handle the process of doing an exact jump for reading from one sector to another, and after a few attemps, if may give the OS an CRC error. Defragmenting may prevent that, but I would change the HD anyway.
BUT, if it has great fragmentation, I assume it's an old harddisk. My experience at this point is:
-If you get blue screens, look at the message
-Check Memory
-Change the IDE cable
-Change the hard disk
-Use ntfs and different partitions for swapping & user data