From: Bill Baka on 26 May 2010 02:13 On 02/19/2010 01:52 AM, Gas Bag wrote: > I've recently installed Windows XP Home on a partitioned hard drive. > The C: Drive (which contains the operating system) is about 10GB, and > the D: Drive is about 18GB. I have the most horrendous case of hard > drive thrashing that I've ever come across. It's particularly bad > whenever I open up an Internet Explorer 8 webpage, even if that page > is simply sitting idle. I confirmed this when I downloaded and ran > "Process Explorer". I don't have Norton installed on my system, and > I've defragged both my C: and D: Drives, as well as cleaning out all > temp folders. > I recently followed these instructions: > > http://bucarotechelp.com/computers/windowsts/95021801.asp > > But still this problem of thrashing continues. It's got so bad my > system freezes (or comes very close to it). Please help! It sounds like disk doctor program is in order to defrag you system. There is actually a defrag built into Windows 7 but I haven't used it yet.
From: Swifty on 26 May 2010 04:58 On Fri, 19 Feb 2010 01:52:26 -0800 (PST), Gas Bag <shazlikd(a)yahoo.com.au> wrote: >I've recently installed Windows XP Home on a partitioned hard drive. >The C: Drive (which contains the operating system) is about 10GB, and >the D: Drive is about 18GB. Note that when you defragment two partitions on a single drive, you may actually make matters worse. Defragmentation usually works by moving the files as close together as possible, and usually as close to location zero within the partition as possible. So your data ends up in two "bands", and each time you reference the other partition, you have to cross the gap between the bands. The answer to this is to defragment the lower-placed partition towards the upper end of its range, and the higher placed partition towards the lower end of its range. I believe that jkdefrag can do this, but you might have to force the issue by requesting a gap at the bottom of the lowest partition. If you do things this way, then your data ends up on one band, which spans the divide between your partition. However, in most cases the problem is insufficient RAM, which causes swapping. That can really hammer your disk. Your Process Explorer can tell you if this is happening a lot - look at column "Page Fault Delta" (which you'll have to add - it is not in the default columns displayed) -- Steve Swift http://www.swiftys.org.uk/swifty.html http://www.ringers.org.uk
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