![]() ![]() In my many years of Mac experience, the most common user profile who could theoretically benefit from an occasional disk defrag are multimedia creators who have tons of enormous files scattered around an old hard drive. Generally, it’s a small cohort of Mac users who may potentially benefit from using manual disk defragmentation tools in OS X. What about the exceptions? What Macs need to be defragged? Additionally, many modern Macs ship with SSD, or Flash Storage drives, which don’t ever need to be defragged in general because they have their own maintenance process known as TRIM. There are several reasons for this, one being that the Mac OS X HFS Plus file system automatically defragments files on its own, in a process known as Hot File Adaptive Clustering (HFC). One would assume that if Apple felt defragmenting a Mac drive was important enough, it would have included such a feature in the Disk Utility app of OS X, right? But it didn’t, and no such defrag option exists, which should give a pretty clear indicator that for the vast majority of Mac users, defragging an OS X drive simply isn’t a necessary task. ![]() On the other hand, Mac OS X includes no such defragging tools or general drive optimizations (no, Repair Disk is not the same thing). ![]() Newer versions of Windows have generally improved on file fragmentation, but many longtime users continue to perform a regular defrag even if it has turned into a hocus-pocus maintenance routine, and the defrag ability remains intact in the newest versions of Windows, renamed from “Disk Defragmenter” to now be labeled as a more generic “Optimize Drives” function. Fragmentation in Windows vs OS Xįragmentation is so common in the Windows world that the Windows operating system includes built-in defragmenting utilities, which has become a part of the typical maintenance scheme of most PC owners. The result is most often felt as decreased performance of the computer, and the resolution is a process called defragmentation, which basically just reorganizes the data so that related bits are grouped together. It would be nice if there was a bit more explanation included, but overall, the app works quite well and delivers a useful set of functions.Įditors' note: This is a review of the trial version of Yosemite Cache Cleaner for Mac 9.0.2.If you’re confused already, here’s some quick background disk fragmentation is the gradual inability of a file system to keep related data together, which results in increased hard drive activity as the drive has to seek out related data more often. Yosemite Cache Cleaner for Mac gives you a lot of useful tools for maintaining the various systems on your computer. This can make it hard to fully take advantage of all system functions without going through the entire user manual. Lack of explanations: While some of the tools are relatively self-explanatory, others are not. Other categories of tools include Optimize, Cache Cleaning, and Trash.Ĭlear interface: The interface is laid out efficiently, with categories listed on the left, and the various tools associated with the selected category on the right. Variety of functions: Yosemite Cache Cleaner's maintenance tools repair permissions, run maintenance scripts, clean Internet caches, and more. ![]() Yosemite Cache Cleaner for Mac removes all kinds of unwanted junk from your computer and includes various maintenance tools to ensure smooth functioning over the long term. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |