Originally posted by swamp
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Reply to: Why does Defrag need Admin rights?
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Previously on "Why does Defrag need Admin rights?"
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Just been looking into this and it looks as though you are right! Although data does get spread (deliberately) the speed more than compensates and a defrag would just wear out the sectors by doing unnecessary read/writes.
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This summer I was doing one day a week elsewhere. Every single week for 3 months Adobe did its download bit then couldn't install.Originally posted by zeitghostIt causes me endless amusement that the two new machines in the lab are tied down so tightly that it won't run upgrades in the "managed software".
It downloaded an upgrade to Adobe this morning but didn't do anything with it because it requires admin rights to install.
Oh yes, if you have admin rights, you can't use the network.
It's sort of catch 22, you see.
The answer to the original question is that the admins should set up defrag to run as a background job in the middle of the night, (or at some other time where machines are switched off overnight).
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C:\defrag c: -f -vOriginally posted by jame View PostI dont know the technicalities of it but in my work place, apparently the IT department has been able to successfully manage defrag jobs by setting one of the commercial completely automatic defrag utilities on the job. It seems that has almost eliminated the manual work involved in this.
Simples
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I dont know the technicalities of it but in my work place, apparently the IT department has been able to successfully manage defrag jobs by setting one of the commercial completely automatic defrag utilities on the job. It seems that has almost eliminated the manual work involved in this.
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Yup, if your hard drive is big and the file is small, the data will be there for anyone to recover.Originally posted by SupremeSpod View PostNot exactly true, specialist equipment can recover data sometimes.
clientCo asked me to put in a request for the GWT plugin install which they did after 2 weeks, 2 weeks after they hired me as a GWT developer.Last edited by minestrone; 26 October 2010, 12:01.
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in any decent organisation this would be controlled centrally and scheduled.
Why admin - Defrag has to have rights to the whole drive, file copy delete has only rights where the admin allows you. If its set right it should be just your my documents and unless needed by programs nowhere else.
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Maybe RC needs to permanently remove the cookies from his pron surfing.
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Not exactly true, specialist equipment can recover data sometimes.Originally posted by kandr View PostIt removes any trace of them, so they can't be undeleted? But so to would copying loads of files, after deleting. The free space would be used. I can kinda see your point though, although once a file is deleted (not recycled) all bets are off whether you can recover it.
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It removes any trace of them, so they can't be undeleted? But so to would copying loads of files, after deleting. The free space would be used. I can kinda see your point though, although once a file is deleted (not recycled) all bets are off whether you can recover it.Originally posted by SupremeSpod View PostHave a think about what defragging a disk does to "so-called" deleted files...
Learn a little about computer hardware and file-systems then come back to me.
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Have a think about what defragging a disk does to "so-called" deleted files...Originally posted by kandr View PostWhat like copying/moving/deleting files, that isn't restricted and that changes the logical layout of the file system, whereas defragging shouldn't
Learn a little about computer hardware and file-systems then come back to me.
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What like copying/moving/deleting files, that isn't restricted and that changes the logical layout of the file system, whereas defragging shouldn'tOriginally posted by SupremeSpod View PostNow, why do you think a program that shuffles bits of data on a hard disk should be restricted to admin?
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