Just to be fair: The follow-up mail on the TidBITs site is largely critical
of the original article I commented on. It finds a number of other good
reasons for defragmenting disks, particularly when using video or graphic
apps that create and use large files, or when running a system that creates
a lot of swap files (fragmented swap files can make a system crawl, so
defragging free space, to allow for contiguous swap files, is important).
But, my interpretation of things, the general opinion seems to be that
defragging the entire disk is something that needs to be done only every
three to six months, and that doing a full backup, erase, and restore
accomplishes the same thing, usually much faster.

For Entourage users, summing up: if you have adequate contiguous free space,
you can "defrag" the Entourage identity files by duplicating the folder,
erasing the original, and renaming the copy to replace the original. It
often will give a noticeable performance boost. A rebuild of the database
will do the same thing (takes a bit longer, though), and (some say) has an
added performance benefit because it reorganizes the database's internal
structure.
-- 
Microsoft MVP for Entourage/OE/Word (MVPs are volunteers)
Allen Watson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Entourage FAQ site:
<http://www.entourage.mvps.org/>
AppleScripts for Outlook Express and Entourage:
 <http://members.thinkaccess.net/[EMAIL PROTECTED]/Scripts/>
Entourage Help Pages: <http://www.entourage.mvps.org/>


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