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joe1234

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  1. Sorry, my bad. I mean to say that I move Fragmented files out to a temporary drive and then move them back in to the original drive as a quick way to defrag. Less wear and tear on the disks too generally speaking. Joe
  2. Hello. I have 8 drives on a system. I am using Windows XP and scheduled all my drives to defrag at the same time, but as far as I can tell, defraggler can only defrag one drive at a time, no? When the time comes to defrag, it only does one drive. Am I missing something?
  3. Hello. Great program and good job folks. I am interested to know what is the difference between the dark blue and the light blue boxes? The legen only mentioned blue, but I see two difference types of blue in the defrag screen. Thanks, Joe
  4. Hello. I agree 100%. I do the same exact thing and I have always wondered why defrag programs don't have this feature which would speed things up considerably. Moving files OUT of a drive temporarily and them moving them back in is the way to go for speed. Some people move the entire contents of a drive from one drive to another as a way to defrag - that an over kill. All you need to do is move the files you know are deframented.
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