We are happy to present you the new Auslogics Disk Defrag 3beta! We call it “new” because Disk Defrag 3beta is not just a defragmenter but a fully featured disk optimizer. We’ve supplied it with advanced techniques of disk optimization that only paid analogs have. With Disk Defrag 3beta you can replace regular data files from the MFT Reserved Zone, consolidate free space and optimize system files placement. Let’s have a closer look at how these optimization techniques may affect your PC performance.

Auslogics Disk Defrag 3 (beta)System files smart placement

Commonly used by Windows, system files may be scattered all over the disk and intermixed with data files. Disk Defrag 3beta arranges system files by defragmenting and moving them to the faster part of the disk.  This minimizes the time needed for HDD to access system files and improves overall computer performance.

Free space consolidation

It is not a secret that a simple defragmentation leaves the free space on the disk highly fragmented. It means that there are many free space «holes» all over the disk. Windows fills in those free spaces with newly created or extended files. The more fragmented the free space is, the more fragmented new files will be.

Disk Defrag 3beta merges all those free space «holes» into a large contiguous block during optimization process. This allows the file system to create new files without fragmentation. As a result, free space consolidation dramatically reduces further disk fragmentation.

Read the rest of this entry

[Connotea] [del.icio.us] [Digg] [dzone] [Facebook] [Fark] [folkd.com] [Furl] [Kaboodle] [Mister Wong] [Mixx] [MySpace] [Propeller] [Reddit] [Slashdot] [Sphere] [Sphinn] [Squidoo] [StumbleUpon] [Technorati] [Twitter]
, , , , ,

Recently I’ve noticed a lot of people on the Internet asking what’s the difference between defragmenting your hard drive and defragmenting the Registry, and why one should defrag the Registry anyway. So here goes!

The Difference

When you defrag your hard disk, defragging software finds fragments of a file, that are scattered all over your hard disk. Then it moves the fragments and groups them together, so that the file is all in one place. So, basically, defragmentation puts the files back together.

Badly fragmented disk really slow down your computer, so you should defrag once a week if you download a lot of files and install a lot of software, or at least once a month.

Defragmenting, or rather compacting the Registry, is a very similar process. The difference is that this time files don’t get defragmented – it’s only your Registry.

Read the rest of this entry

[Connotea] [del.icio.us] [Digg] [dzone] [Facebook] [Fark] [folkd.com] [Furl] [Kaboodle] [Mister Wong] [Mixx] [MySpace] [Propeller] [Reddit] [Slashdot] [Sphere] [Sphinn] [Squidoo] [StumbleUpon] [Technorati] [Twitter]
, , , , , , , ,