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Thread: Why so many unmoveable blocks?

  1. #1

    Why so many unmoveable blocks?

    This morning I ran the full suite of updates, spyware checks, antivirus, reg cleaners/fixers, disk scanners, and defrags...and I noticed something that kinda irritated me.

    There seems to be A LOT of unmoveable blocks with my WinXP computers. Even on my partitions with only games and movie and mp3 media-about 1 in 20 blocks is unmoveable.

    Why?


    And, is there a defragger out there that will defragment them? (I'm currently using FixIt Utilities 5)
    Five years...

  2. #2
    Lieutenant Junior Grade
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    The unmoveable blocks are usually system files.

    Norton usually can move them but it's really slow going doing so.

  3. #3
    Originally posted by PCC
    The unmoveable blocks are usually system files.
    Norton usually can move them but it's really slow going doing so.
    One of the drives has only MP3's / DIVX / GBA on it. I wonder if it considers the thumbnail files unmoveable files. Man...so irritating.

    Are you sure the newest version of Norton can move them? All versions of systemworks up to 2002 couldn't.
    Five years...

  4. #4
    Lieutenant Junior Grade
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    Nope, not sure but Norton has traditionally been the best at it.

    The only alternative is an old administrator's trick and that is to completely back up the drive and then do a restore over the existing drive.

  5. #5
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    try diskeeper, one of the better defrag tools out there. It can defrag everything including system files, but it might require you to reboot so it can do the scan before windows starts up
    The newbie was here.

  6. #6
    Originally posted by DaNewbie
    try diskeeper, one of the better defrag tools out there. It can defrag everything including system files, but it might require you to reboot so it can do the scan before windows starts up
    That's a good idea. I'll give it a try.
    Five years...

  7. #7
    Vice Admiral gwilks98's Avatar
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    Diskeeper is great for this. Also, I believe Sysinternals.com has a few performance utilities that can degfrag page files, etc.
    "I know the pieces fit, cause I watched them fall away."

    "Cold silence has
    A tendancy to
    Atrophy any
    Sense of compassion."

    MJK

  8. #8
    have you made sure that all programs and explorer windows and excess services are turned off before defragging?
    Find some free Comcast or Verizon on-demand movies to watch at home tonight:
    www.movie-cat.tv

  9. #9
    Chief of Naval Operations attgig's Avatar
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    yeah, might be the system restore. keeps track/history of what's in the drive. it can be turned on for all of your drives, which take up space.

    right click my computer, properties, system restore.

  10. #10
    Never saw the need for system restore...so don't use it. I'll try diskkeeper when I...uh...aquire it.
    Five years...

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