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Definitive Best Defragmenter 2013


Definitive Best Defragmenter 2012  

264 members have voted

  1. 1. Your Choice?

    • Advanced Disk Optimizer
      0
    • Auslogic
      15
    • Defraggler
      22
    • Diskeeper
      7
    • MST Defrag
      0
    • PerfectDisk
      15
    • Puran Defrag
      3
    • O&O Defrag
      2
    • Norton Utilities
      0
    • Smart Defrag
      4
    • Smashing Defrag
      0
    • Ultimate Defrag
      2
    • Vopt
      0
    • Windows Defrag
      31
    • Other (please specify)
      5


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23 answers to this question

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Paid for version of PerfectDisk is great but there also is a free version without some of the 'bells and whistles'............You can also defrag the system files on reboot by right clicking the drive when you have the software up.............

http://www.raxco.com/home/pdfree.aspx

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I used windows defrag and then ran defraggler and it showed windows defragged files but didnt move them, so the files where a checkered pattern on the drive. and these files where not in use at the time.

 

used defraggler and it moved all the files with the rest.

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I used to use/and or try Diskeeper, Perfect disk, O &O defrag, iobit defrag, auslogics defrag and defraggler. The main problem is that each and every program has its own idea of what is the best way to organize your drive. Some just consulate and defrag. While others think least modified goes first and then most recent to prevent fragmentation. Others defrag on the fly. Personally defraggler is the best because it is free, and has a scheduler and a boot time defrag. I use now just the regular defrag in windows for windows 8 (3 machines) and regular for 1 windows 7 machine. If you still use XP, vista, or less then 20% free space...then you'll need defraggler but other then that Windows defrag works fine.

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Why "Windows Defrag" is winning? what's the reason? tested and compared with other defragmenters? or it's just because is "free" and included with Windows?

Because people are increasingly using SSDs and need only their extra drives defragged every so often.

 

I'm still in the MyDefrag camp otherwise, but don't need it anymore.

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SSDs can become fragmented, just like any other data storage device, however seek time is no longer really a big issue (due to it being virtually zero, even from the start to the end of a partition or drive).

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