In Microsoft Windows, one reasonable way of combating the huge amount of devastated slack space, which results by using large sizes of disk clusters, is to divide larger hard drives into multiple partitions. Using disk partitioning for reducing slack space is pretty much essential if your version of Windows operating system doesn’t support FAT32 and later file systems. With huge amount of hard drives, it is generally done even if you have FAT32 of later file systems, for keeping the cluster sizes to reasonable level. However, partitioning a hard drive that contains data, may sometimes cause data loss and need Windows Data Recovery to be sorted out.
Although, dividing hard drive in several partitions is a pretty good thing, but sometimes users do not understand the “Too much of a good thing” concept. They run across the line and chop up their hard drives into nonsensical numbers of small partitions, observing that they are increasing the disk space utilization. The ironical thing is they can not save as much disk space as they believed they can and make it confusing to find any particular file in several partitions.
The reason is that the litter a hard drive partition is, the greater a possibility of this has to be led empty for avoiding the probability of going out of space. Running out of disk space may lead to critical data loss. If you let the hard drive get close to a point where it’s running out of the disk space may increased disk fragmentation and decrease disk performance. Read the rest of this entry »
