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- Buggy drivers - Buggy windows - Buggy hardware - Buggy end-user software Quote:
- Disk fragmentation - Bloated registry; this doesn't mean it's corrupt, just that it contains a vast amount of (very often unused) entries. - Unnecessary background programs Quote:
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However, especially harddisks are highly "intelligent". So you can monitor them and most of the time replace them before they fail. This feature is called "SMART" and there are certainly tools for Windos which can use this to diagnose problems and tell you the current status of your disk. Of course, that helps with disks in-use only. If your drive supports power management to turn the drive off when not in use, you should disable it by all means. The most critical event for a harddisk is spin-up/spin-down and stresses it the most. There's a very simple rule that applies to almost all materials: Frequent drastic temperature changes make things brittle and thus destroy it in the end. A drive that runs 24/7 is much less stressed than one in a computer which is switched on/off several times a day. Quote:
I don't see any evidence that mere read-access could cause anything like that. If you really move files from one folder to another in contrast to moving them to a different partition, coruption should be fairly unlikely as this causes only some changes in the directory entries. That's why this operation works in an instant. In any case, it's by far more likely that you use data by viruses or accidential deletion than by "bit rot". |
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