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Thank you for your example - But XP is not Win 7, so I'm a little confused why you chose that. I'm simply pointing out that the Windows Engineering Team are saying that for Win 7 the best practice is to do nothing.
Among the other changes under the hood in Windows 7 are the following:
Defragmentation in Windows 7 is more comprehensive – many files that could not be re-located in Windows Vista or earlier versions can now be optimally re-placed. In particular, a lot of work was done to make various NTFS metadata files movable. This ability to relocate NTFS metadata files also benefits volume shrink, since it enables the system to pack all files and file system metadata more closely and free up space “at the end” which can be reclaimed if required.
If solid-state media is detected, Windows disables defragmentation on that disk. The physical nature of solid-state media is such that defragmentation is not needed and in fact, could decrease overall media lifetime in certain cases.
By default, defragmentation is disabled on Windows Server 2008 R2 (the Windows 7 server release). Given the variability of server workloads, defragmentation should be enabled and scheduled only by an administrator who understands those workloads.
Best practices for using defragmentation in Windows 7 are simple – you do not need to do anything! Defragmentation is scheduled to automatically run periodically and in the background with minimal impact to foreground activity. This ensures that data on your hard disk drives is efficiently placed so the system can provide optimal responsiveness...
My Computer
At a glance
Windows 7 (x64)Intel Core i7 960 @ 3.8GHz (3.2GHz stock)6GB OCZ DDR3 1600Powercolor AX5870 (ATI 5870 w/improved cooling)
- Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
- Home Built
- OS
- Windows 7 (x64)
- CPU
- Intel Core i7 960 @ 3.8GHz (3.2GHz stock)
- Motherboard
- EVGA E758 X-58
- Memory
- 6GB OCZ DDR3 1600
- Graphics Card(s)
- Powercolor AX5870 (ATI 5870 w/improved cooling)
- Sound Card
- Omega Claro+
- Monitor(s) Displays
- 1. Acer P243W (24") 2. Samsung T260 HD HDMI HDTV/Monitor
- Screen Resolution
- 1920 x 1200 x 2
- Hard Drives
- (1) 128GB Kingston SNVP325-S2 SSD for OS/Games
(2) 500GB WD Caviar Black - Storage
- PSU
- Corsair CMPSU-850HX
- Case
- Lian Li PC-K60WB
- Cooling
- Thermalright Venemous-X
- Keyboard
- Microsoft Natural keyboard 4000
- Mouse
- Microsoft Sidewinder
- Internet Speed
- Cable
- Other Info
- 165 bclk, 23 Multi
