Try Googling Auslogics as they have a free defragger which I use and feel is very good.
Defragging is something that I tend to do at weekends when the PC is idle. I would've thought that doing it during the week while other stuff is running would slow it down. Just a thought.
I used to use Smart Defragger which was supposed to work when the machine was idle - but I thought it was hogging resources.
I move to this mainly as it comes from the same people of CCleaner that many of us around here think as Bees Knees!
EDIT. Another reason that I moved from the constant defragger is because I was finding it made my nightly Acronis much slower and larger as it had much more new information to record.
That was Windows '98!!! XP doesn't do that. Window's defrag very slow though, imo. As mentioned, best to do it when PC idle for a few hours. Any basic maintenance you can do will help to speed up the processing speed. The less files / rubbish it has to search the faster it will operate.
My Windows defragger kept saying that there were a load of files that couldn't be defragged. The Auslogics defragger somehow manages to delete them. And it's pretty to look at as TP alludes to with his defragger.
Indeed. I started defrag at 21.00hrs. It was 34% complete at around 03.30 when I made a trip across the landing. Nothing else running and speed of scan on max.
Also as Hilary says some files were not defragged.
Thanks for all the responses - I'll probably try TP's solution first if only cos I like my ccleaner.
If you are going to defrag your disk then make sure you run CCleaner first to remove all the unwanted and temporary files otherwise it will take even longer.
One of the other problems with some of the defrag software is that it doesn't defrag the free space. This means that as files expand or new files get written they get bits and pieces to use. I notice that Piriform Defraggler has a feature to just defrag the free space and on a file by file basis if requested. It seems pretty good. It has made a better job at defragmentation than Smart Defrag, but it took around ten times as long. I am going to try the Auslogics Defrag system next.
After Auslogics Defrag and then the other two repeated again I finally managed 0% fragmentation. Each defragmenter managed different files to a different degree.
Whist we are in disk tidy up mode (must be too quiet for much trading) can I mention the massive disk space I recovered by using the facility to delete all the recovery points but one in Drive Properties.
I have a 250 gig disk on this machine. I let MS update my Vista. I recovered about 30 gig three months ago and another 30 gig had crept back by yesterday.