But of course! Defragmenting does recoup a small bit of space, but, more
importantly, it really helps memory management. The Windows file system
consumes lots more memory managing all the fragments of a file compared to a
contiguous file... Ben Myers
On Fri, 31 Dec 2004 19:56:07 -0700, "Quaoar" <> wrote:
>ben_myers_spam_me_not @ charter.net (Ben Myers) wrote:
>> Windows sets up a swap file on the hard drive. When the amount of
>> space available on the hard drive is less than the amount of swap
>> file space Windows wants, it tells you.
>>
>> Go to the Run command and enter %temp% in the dialog box. This will
>> show you the contents of the temporary files left behind by software
>> that does not know enough to clean up after itself. Get rid of these
>> files and folders to free up hard drive capacity. The run a Disk
>> Cleanup to free up some more space on the hard drive.
>>
>> Even though the hard drive is 75% full, it's the absolute amount of
>> free file space that counts... Ben Myers
>>
>> On Fri, 31 Dec 2004 18:41:08 -0500, "Tim" <>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> I have a Pavilion 4535 running Windows 98SE. Recently, Windows
>>> displayed a warning about low hard drive space. Meanwhile it's only
>>> 75% full. (It's a 6GB drive with 1.5 GBs free.)
>>>
>>> So far I've tried ...
>>>
>>> running scandisk
>>> defragmenting
>>> running AdAware and NAV scans for spyware and viruses
>>>
>>> I eventually deleted some files to make more space on the drive. This
>>> stopped the error messages, but I'm still wondering what could cause
>>> them in the first place. The only recent changes I made to the
>>> system were updating Direct X from its original 6.1 to version 7a.
>>> I also updated the sound card drivers. Could either of these
>>> changes cause such an error? The hard drive was also replaced about
>>> three years ago. Thanks in advance.
>>>
>>> My system ...
>>>
>>> HP Pavilion 4535
>>> Windows 98SE
>>> Celeron 400
>>> 384 MBs RAM
>>> 6 GB HD (replacement drive)
>>> USR 56K Modem
>>> Diamond MX300 sound card
>
>...and it might be terminally fragmented unless it has been defragged
>recently.
>
>Q
>
>
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