One of my grand-kids has managed to screw up her laptop again and has returned to the cheapest repairer she knows of to get it sorted out - me.
After getting it working OK I want to add another partition to separate her OS and programs from all her data so that I can take and retain an Acronis image of her C: drive to make my task easier the next time she brings it round - as she surely will. I also want to show her how to back up her data onto removable media.
I know how to do this but the impending task has raised a question in my mind. She has thousands of photos and music tracks on the laptop and is constantly adding new ones and deleting some old ones. Hence her data files must be splattered all over the hard drive intermixed with free space. My question is this - and it is probably a dumb one - when you partition a drive does the new partiton comprise (free space) sectors collected from various tracks and segments of the disk - or are they contiguous.
My guess is that if you started off with an unused disc and created partitions on it - each partition would occupy (and thereafter retain) a continuous physical "chunk" on the disc. Hence all the C: drive items would be butted up together and physically separated from all the D: drive items.
If however you add a partion to a used drive - is the data now all jumbled up physically and only notionally separated into its relevant partition by the MBR.
Defragging a heavily used drive is always a good idea - but is there any merit - in terms of getting data physically into the right area of the drive - in defragging the drive before creating a new partition?
After getting it working OK I want to add another partition to separate her OS and programs from all her data so that I can take and retain an Acronis image of her C: drive to make my task easier the next time she brings it round - as she surely will. I also want to show her how to back up her data onto removable media.
I know how to do this but the impending task has raised a question in my mind. She has thousands of photos and music tracks on the laptop and is constantly adding new ones and deleting some old ones. Hence her data files must be splattered all over the hard drive intermixed with free space. My question is this - and it is probably a dumb one - when you partition a drive does the new partiton comprise (free space) sectors collected from various tracks and segments of the disk - or are they contiguous.
My guess is that if you started off with an unused disc and created partitions on it - each partition would occupy (and thereafter retain) a continuous physical "chunk" on the disc. Hence all the C: drive items would be butted up together and physically separated from all the D: drive items.
If however you add a partion to a used drive - is the data now all jumbled up physically and only notionally separated into its relevant partition by the MBR.
Defragging a heavily used drive is always a good idea - but is there any merit - in terms of getting data physically into the right area of the drive - in defragging the drive before creating a new partition?
My Computer
- Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
- Home built
- OS
- Windows 7 64 bit
- CPU
- Intel Q9650
- Motherboard
- ASUS P5QL-E
- Memory
- 4GB DDR2 1066
- Graphics Card(s)
- ASUS GF8600 GT 256 MB
- Sound Card
- On board
- Monitor(s) Displays
- LG Flatron L226WTQ-SF
- Hard Drives
- WD 320 GB SATA 32 MB Internal
Seagate 250 GB SATA 16 MB Internal
WD 500 MB SATA 32 MG external eSATA
WD 1 TB SATA 16 MB external eSATA
- PSU
- Antec Neopower 650 W
- Case
- Antec P182
- Cooling
- Artic AC-FRZ-7P Freezer Cooler