Are you still meant to defrag once a week?

are you still meant to defrag once a week?

Not for an ssd

i havent defragged a disk since like 2004

If you're on a decent botnet they'll handle it for you

i think defragging once a week would probably reduce the life of a mechanical drive by a great deal.

Recent Windows versions will do it for you automatically. Manual defrag will just be a waste of time.

I've used to defrag everytime I installed a big game, It gave me peace of mind, even If it was just placebo

Not really, I've auto defrag on startup and I've not had a single driver issue in a decade, using 4 hard drives.

>2TB SG 2016 (3398 hours)
>2TB SG 2014 (10053 hours)
>500GB Hitachi 2010 (26760 hours)
>200GB Maxtor 2007 (exceeded counter limit)

The newest one is encrypted and I don't load it often so it's not affected much but the others are always defragged on startup.
Currently having 0% fragmentation on all 4 drives.

>driver
Minus r* and the program I use is o&o pro by the way. I recommend it.

Yup every month getting ssd is worth it
Defrag is so fast

I never defragged one of my HDDs.

Defragging makes the files easier to find, and therefore less needle-scratch.

t. one who is still using the $3500 10mb hard disk since 1987

Why not use diskeeper? It manages write operations so it's like live defragging

>Using rotating storage in 2017
Why would you do this?

> defragging AT STARTUP EVERY TIME

total autism

Can we just kill the shitty filesystems that need to be defragged?

Install gentoo

You must be retarded. There is no zero cost way to do that. You must keep track of things to do that and that's a cost in time.

Even SSDs fragment but most retards don't know that.

Every filesystem can become fragmented. When the spaces aren't big enough anymore for bigger files.

Definitely not for an ext4 SSD

Both ext4 is fragmented and SSD is fragmented. It's just that ext4 has a mechanism of action that makes it less serious of a problem and SSD has a mechanism of action that makes it less of a problem.

The memes that there are 0 fragmentations on ext or SSD have to die.

Fragmentation doesn't affect an SSD at all so who cares?

It does. Look it up. It's just a meme that it doesn't.

Only truth in it is that it affects it less.

and that the cons outweigh the pros.
Substantially more writes for a negligible performance increase you know.

>defrag
just pajeet OS things.

windows since vista does it automatically for you while the system is idle and SSDs are excluded because they don't need it

SSDs literally try to "fragment" the data as much as possible so that a large file is sharded across multiple NAND chips to make it possible to access the data in parallel to increase sequential read performance.

dafraging means building clusters of related bits. if you're going to read a file from a defragmented disk you'll hear less noise than you would hear from an non defragmented disk. because the actuator arm can read the entire file from a single cluster (depending on the size of the file) which means the arm doesn't need to switch tracks while reading. which would cause that clicking noise.

conclusion:
less movement means less wear on mechanical parts => longer durability

your statement is incorrect.

I don't usually defrag. Is defragging ''ungluing'' files and folders so I can delete them?

*''unglueing''

Best idea with platter drives actually

No, it's your computer putting a jigsaw puzzle together inside your hard drive

Who da semen demon tho

>Drive's contents changed: restarting...

only if you use a shit OS

My SSDs work fast enough without defragging, and I don't write data often enough on my HDDs for them to be affected. If they are greatly fragmented, they are usually already so old that I'm replacing them; and copying the data to a new blank drive acts as defragmenting it.

>Not for an ssd

Only because it "wastes" write cycles. But, truth is that your SSD will improve speeds greatly after defragging (specifically, by defragmenting free space, not data), since then it will have more fully empty sectors to write to, instead of needing to read partial data off from partially full cells and rewriting the whole thing.

But the main reason I don't ever defrag anymore is because the windows Shadow Copy works on a sector map level. If you defrag, it will delete shadow copies and you can't roll back to older versions of files. As rare as I use that, it's still exceedingly useful.