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At 6:37 PM -0700 8/28/02, Clifford Novey wrote: >Why? >c > >> much better just to upload the whole thing to the computer > > and reformat the disk and reload the samples... er, yes, as I sent this off I realized that I didn't really explain why but I was just too slack to call it back... Basically, if you reformat the card and put the information back on, you KNOW what you are getting -- a completely empty FAT that has been filled with just your files. If you use someone's defragmentation utility, you don't know what you are getting. Moreover, you are putting a lot of read/write on the drive (which isn't really an issue for solid state I suppose but is bad for hard drives). At 6:46 PM -0700 8/28/02, Sean Echevarria wrote: >If the CFC was close to being full, wouldn't writing the same files >back to the CFC cause defragmentation? I believe that you intended to write "fragmentation". > You're assuming the writes will happen contiguously (not just >unfragmented but also nice and neat with no gaps between each file)? >It seems that if there are gaps between earlier files written, then >the last files to be written will have to be fragmented. It's not a requirement of DOS format but in practice disk driver writers do in fact allocate memory from a clean disk contiguously for that very reason. /t -- http://loopNY.com ......................An "open loop": shows every Saturday! http://whatGoes.com/submit .......................... submit to the calendar.