
Doug Quance
2006 Cave Roast Chairman
I'm no computer scientist, but I have been playing with these things for over 20 years.
I do not doubt the claims by those that defrag infrequently. Your system can either handle... or fail to handle... the workload that you give it.
Here's my experience:
After trying to avoid using XP (I've got 2000 pro on my other computers) I was forced to get it with my non linear video editing system... because it is more stable than 2000.
XP does seem to frag pretty quickly, and those 'in the know' in video circles all agree that you should defrag your drives before capture and before final render.
I have four hard drives in this system... a 40 gig system drive, two 80 gig in a raid array (acting as one drive), and an 80 gig output drive. With video, it's best to record to the two disk array (for highest throughput) and render the "mix" to another drive. I do the same for audio.
I defrag the raid array before a capture and then again before a final mix. I also defrag the render drive before the final mix.
I defrag the system drive every week, as well as run a variety of system tests and cleanup duties.
Whether you want to take these steps is up to you. I am sure you could drive a car 100,000 miles without changing the oil, but I bet you wouldn't try. A good system regimen can go a long way towards keeping your computer in top running condition.
My personal recommendation is Norton SytemWorks.
My 2 cents
I do not doubt the claims by those that defrag infrequently. Your system can either handle... or fail to handle... the workload that you give it.
Here's my experience:
After trying to avoid using XP (I've got 2000 pro on my other computers) I was forced to get it with my non linear video editing system... because it is more stable than 2000.
XP does seem to frag pretty quickly, and those 'in the know' in video circles all agree that you should defrag your drives before capture and before final render.
I have four hard drives in this system... a 40 gig system drive, two 80 gig in a raid array (acting as one drive), and an 80 gig output drive. With video, it's best to record to the two disk array (for highest throughput) and render the "mix" to another drive. I do the same for audio.
I defrag the raid array before a capture and then again before a final mix. I also defrag the render drive before the final mix.
I defrag the system drive every week, as well as run a variety of system tests and cleanup duties.
Whether you want to take these steps is up to you. I am sure you could drive a car 100,000 miles without changing the oil, but I bet you wouldn't try. A good system regimen can go a long way towards keeping your computer in top running condition.
My personal recommendation is Norton SytemWorks.
My 2 cents
