Yeah!Quote from Luto:
I try to keep the amount of information needed to a minimum.
Everything fits on a RAM key.
Keep the machine ultra clean too.
--Cheers
.)What imaging software are you using?Quote from spike500:
Yesterday i discovered something that might perhaps be useful to others.
So by making an image and immediately restoring the image you can clean up your disk.
Apparently even the system files are moved. I didn't now this was possible.
And Yes the system is still running.
Quote from Bernard111:
>>So by making an image and immediately restoring the image you can clean up your disk.
>>
Is it not faster running directly a defragmentation with Diskeeper?
Quote from winter:
Acronis True Image is excellent backup software, can be used to make a backup of the full disk to a network shared drive while the OS is running. It also lets you mount the created image as a virtual drive, browse the directory structure and selectively restore files if you need to (instead of a full image restore)
I thought that Diskeeper by default attemped to cluster the files towards the beginning of the disk by virtue of its attempt to create as much contiguous free space as possible towards the end. I know it can relocate system files if you let it do its boot time defragmentation.
Surprised that an image restore would move any files, by definition an image restore doesnt work at the file level, just treats the disk (or partition) as a single entity.
Wow, that is nice and clean.Quote from spike500:
I added a screenshot from my PC. As you can see everything was moved to the beginning of D. Before i restored D the files were spread over the disk, included the systemfiles.