Wednesday, April 8, 2026

Defragging

Ah the memories, often associated in my mind with dial up internet.

I cannot remember Windows 3.1 but I certainly can remember Windows 95, which had a semi manual system for defragging your computer. I suppose I used to do it every few months, and with another system check, which I no longer remember. What is defragging? The proper word would be defragmentation, so it is correcting when everything is fragmented. It pulls together bits and pieces on your hard drive into a more orderly manner, hopefully to improve your computer's performance. 

I think we moved on to Windows 98 but certainly not Windows ME, which was and is known to be less stable than previous versions of Windows. The next was Windows XP and then Windows 10, which is what I am now using and have for a very long time.

I am being nagged by Microsoft to upgrade to Windows 11, and I guess I will have to bite the bullet at some point and change over. 

Now defragging happens automatically and you don't know what your computer is doing in the background, as it looks after itself.

Here is a nice clip of what you saw when you were defragging back in the 90s. I used to find it quite mesmerising and strangely relaxing. 

64 comments:

  1. Ah yes, I remember the defrag - had to do it often! I started work just prior to Windows 3.1 - so have seen all permutations. Windows 11 isn't that scary.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Jeanie, I have done it now, and the world hasn't broken.

      Delete
  2. I remember this process! My husband worked in IT for decades and keeps my machine running on Windows 10 while it looks like an earlier version (7?) for my ease of use. Lately he successfully stripped away unwanted elements of 11 and still considers switching to a Linux Mint operating system.

    The tech speak goes over my head, of course. Today he rattled off something and I, looking thoughtful, replied, "I know that guy."

    lol

    Those Cinderella potatoes are yummy and I plan to eat one later this evening. :) Be well!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Most interesting Darla. I've always worked out tech for myself but some people online over the years have been so helpful.

      Delete
  3. Our first computer was an Amstrad…. Worst buy ever , A year or so later Apple 1992 ..have been an Appler ever since. Easy peasy
    Had to use a Microsoft one for work but by then they had sorted themselves out or perhaps made them more understandable .I am grateful that I was early adopter of computers and technology .

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I too am pleased to get in early with the internet. I remember Amstrad, and I think we were looking at a Commodore 64 then.

      Delete
  4. Remember the sound of the dial up? It makes me stop to think about what other sounds no longer apply to our world. The sound of a coffee percolator. The television test pattern when the station went off the air.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Debby, the sound and the relief when it connected. Yes, coffee percolators. In addition to the tv shutting down, here God Save the Queen was played, and we should stand, which we did to walk over to the tv to turn it off.

      Delete
  5. I miss defragging, I enjoyed watching the process. I know, I'm weird.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. There, there Jackie. Enlarge the clip to full screen and put in on repeat.

      Delete
  6. Okay, I remember the term but not actually doing it. Looks like a video game:)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Sandra, yes, a little like an auto Tetris.

      Delete
  7. I thought that defragging was something that gay men did in public conveniences. Obviously, I was wrong.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Clearly YP. You are mixing it with defagging, which was tried on men after were caught.

      Delete
  8. I was never very technically skilled but now much less so. And I certainly do not know what the computer is doing in the foreground, let alone in the background. Perhaps it is an early sign of Modern Dementia.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hels, as a user of IRC, you were cutting edge. Fortunately computers now work quite reliably....mostly.

      Delete
  9. I'm so glad I don't have to do defragging any more. But then there's cache emptying..

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Boud, I should do that, and empty the recycling bin. I should...

      Delete
  10. I just turn it on and hope for the best.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Fun60, I must check if you eventually sorted out the order problem in one of Tube Line exploration lists.

      Delete
  11. I was a latecomer to the internet, and when I finally went online it was the library computer, which by that time, (early 21st century) dialup was passe, at least as far as public libraries were concerned. It was years before the pandemic forced me to go buy my own computer.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Kirk, I can only say be grateful for what you did not experience.

      Delete
  12. I remember defragging and watching the screen. I remember windows 98 and XP as being the best. I'm on Windows 10 now and will switch to 11 only when I have to. I remember Hating dial-up, yes with a capital H.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. River, a comment below has triggered me to update to Windows 11. I have nothing on tomorrow morning, so I will give it a crack then, and of course post about it.

      Delete
  13. I also remember 98 had screen savers and you could select your preferred design and watch it, I liked the one with pipes building and joining themselves and every once in a while a join would be a teapot or a jug or something. I really miss screen savers.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oh yes, the pipes. I had totally forgotten.

      Delete
  14. I certainly remember defragging, sometimes it took a long time. Interesting to watch everything get put back into place. I had 98, Me, and all of them as time went on and they became available. I now have Windows 11 on my laptop and Windows 10 on my desktop computer which I hardly ever use these days.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Margaret, I've avoided a laptop, except in the early 2000 teen years. The machine was crap.

      Delete
  15. The Golfer did all that…..still does. He uses the ‘big computer’ I’m quite happy now with phone and IPad.
    I did sometimes sit and watch all the blue and white bits get shuffled around and put back where they belonged.
    Debby mentioned the dial up sound…..not being able to use the phone was part of those days. And watching the little world spin in the corner of the screen

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Cathy, I thought desktops now did all that behind the scenes. I did try and it was indicated it was unnecessary.

      Delete
    2. We ended up getting a second phone line, so when Telstra cable became available, it was a no brainer.

      Delete
  16. That hypnotic mosaic of shifting blocks in Windows 95 defragmenter felt oddly reassuring, as though you could actually watch order being restored to the quiet chaos inside your machine.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Roentare, it is a pity we can't defrag our brains.

      Delete
  17. I don't remember defragging but I do remember when my son was about 12 years old (he is in his forties now) all the lettering falling gracefully off the screen because of a bug.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. That sounds so funny, Thelma, although I am sure it wasn't at the time.

      Delete
  18. I don't remember ever seeing that - it's quite soothing, really.

    ReplyDelete
  19. A flashback to the terrors of the past. I truly wish they would quit making so many changes in operating systems. If it is not broken, don't fix it. I have a Windows 10 machine setting here I should get rid of.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. TP, a desktop machine to get rid of, I guess. I'm sure a laptop is fine for working with photos, but a tablet or phone are hopeless.

      Delete
    2. My desktop is an 8 or 9 year old Mac, that is due for replacement this year. The PC was my second computer in the office.

      Delete
  20. Watching the computer defrag was almost hypnotic!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Bob, it was, and also quite pointless. Although, perhaps it did give us an understanding of how hard disk drives worked.

      Delete
  21. Nostalgic ... I very well remember defraging ... and I how I was told why it's necessary to do it, in order to make the system faster.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Pradeep, yes that was the reason, although I never noticed any difference.

      Delete
  22. We have always had a Mac so this is all foreign to me, Andrew.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. She says, with not a grain of smugness in her statement.

      Delete
  23. Oh wow, I haven't thought of this in a long time! I used to defrag my old Hewlett-Packard computer now and then. It IS weirdly mesmerizing.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It was indeed mesmerising and relaxing, Steve.

      Delete
  24. I definitely remember Windows 98 and the dial up internet had that awful tone it use to do when it connected, so glad we are on fibre now which is way faster.

    ReplyDelete
  25. I have Chromebook now, but I remember the defragging decades ago with Windows.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Linda, it is nice to remember it and know we don't have to do it now.

      Delete
  26. I remember it well tapping my fingers in frustration on the desk, waiting and waiting. Transition to Windows 11 is quite seamless Andrew, It's so similar to 10.
    XO
    WWW

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. WWW, you've convinced me. I will upgrade to 11 tomorrow morning.

      Delete
  27. Há processos que devemos conhecer sobre o funcionamento dos computadores para obtermos deles o melhor funcionamento.
    Abraço de amizade.
    Juvenal Nunes

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thanks for your comment, Juvenal. Now we don't need to know so much to just use a computer.

      Delete
  28. I had never touched the inside of a computer that was Rick's business, but when he died I had to learn to clean his computer and difragging his and mine. I don't know how I managed but it worked. I hate updates they always make things complicated and I hate new Window too. I didn't want to change from Window 10 to 11 and then I had to do it. Don't remember exactly why.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Ingrid, at least you became a competent computer user, without having to know what happens in the background.

      Delete
  29. De Fragging! Walk down memory lane!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. An idiot-proof Chromebook suits me!

      Delete
    2. Isn't it indeed Cloudia. Not all memories are good though, facing the blue screen of death, as I once did. I should look at Chromebook.

      Delete

As spam prevention, if you comment three days after after a post is first published, I will need to approve your comment, so it won't appear immediately.

My boring life

Hairdresser Friend's birthday was last Friday. We had tried to make an arrangement to catch up and kind of settled on the following Mond...