zippy said:Doing a full format of the drive will actually only put more stress on the drive, writing to every sector of the drive (some solid state drives are an exception to this). Then you reload the drive completely, once again writing to nearly every sector of the hard drive. In terms of wear and tear, all you've accomplished is just adding more wear. Error checking and defragging a drive will accomplish the same thing as a low level format, only putting a fraction of the stress on the drive in doing so.

TroyTheZombie said:bazamuffin said:Nice one Troy. Didn't think it would make a difference, but it has. Muchos!
lol, no worries. CIOS 12 uses a specific USB port for usb loading. If your wii is flat, its the bottom one.

Nemix77, there is nothing inherently "wrong" with formatting a drive periodically but your notion that it somehow 'refreshes' or 'revitalizes' the drive is at best a placebo effect.zippy said:Nemix77 said:Reason being is because hard drives become framented or get bad sectors overtime this makes the hard drive have to work even harder to access data causing higher than normal wear n tear...clicking noise anyone? So by doing so, you actually minimzing wear and tear and cleansing the hard drive (your terms)...common sense? Think tires: overtime you tires will be worned and warp to a degree reducing tire life, safety and performace. Maintaining regular balancing of tires and rotation (cause front usually worns out faster) you a minimizing the effect of age and also increasing performace/traction/safety. Agreed?
No. Hard drives don't work that way.
Doing a full format of the drive will actually only put more stress on the drive, writing to every sector of the drive (some solid state drives are an exception to this). Then you reload the drive completely, once again writing to nearly every sector of the hard drive. In terms of wear and tear, all you've accomplished is just adding more wear. Error checking and defragging a drive will accomplish the same thing as a low level format, only putting a fraction of the stress on the drive in doing so.
Hard drive to the tire rotation analogy is nonsensical at best.
edit: Also, you should not get any meaningful fragmentation on a WBFS partition, unless perhaps you add and remove games of varying sizes a considerable number of times. There are no progressive competing writes and scattered files like when running an operating system. The only concern would be error checking the drive and checking the S.M.A.R.T. status to ensure it isn't going to die on you.
+1
Doing a full format of the drive will actually only put more stress on the drive, writing to every sector of the drive (some solid state drives are an exception to this). Then you reload the drive completely, once again writing to nearly every sector of the hard drive. In terms of wear and tear, all you've accomplished is just adding more wear. Error checking and defragging a drive will accomplish the same thing as a low level format, only putting a fraction of the stress on the drive in doing so.Nemix77 said:QUOTE(zippy @ Jun 1 2009, 06:48 AM)
Figures, I think you're on to something.
Huh, I'm wodering why big hard drive companies such as Seagate/Western Digital/Hitachi don't give end users a defragment utility either on disc or download.
Instead, they usually provide the end user with a low level format, regular format and their own error test utility which detects hard drive firmware and logs the serial number.
As for S.M.A.R.T., I think Waninkoko is implementing that in cIOS Rev 13...LMAO
Going back to sleep, post when cIOS Rev 13 is available.
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How is writting 0s to a HDD's surface re-organizing the data (ie defragmenting) when you're eliminating all of the data? That's like saying leveling a building is a quickish way to clean it.manias said:periodic formatting is a quickish way to defrag that's all but the wbfs drives shouldn't really be fragmented to an extent that it would impact functionality so it's a bit useless unless games are broken

RC89 said:I see rev12 has been released, but has rev11 even been released, r11 is part of softmii 3.0.0 It contains the fix for LU64+ wiis
and why update? Which opportunities do you get when updating, if you already is using usb loader and rev10? If everything works, no need to update![]()
Edit: for rev 11 see above post.RC89 said:I see rev12 has been released, but has rev11 even been released, and why update? Which opportunities do you get when updating, if you already is using usb loader and rev10?
tj_cool said:RC89 said:I see rev12 has been released, but has rev11 even been released, r11 is part of softmii 3.0.0 It contains the fix for LU64+ wiis
and why update? Which opportunities do you get when updating, if you already is using usb loader and rev10? If everything works, no need to update![]()
-Unknown- said:Does anybody know why Waninkoko didn't base his cIOS off of IOS37 (vs IOS38) which has USB support embedded in it as well?

I think waninkoko based it on IOS38 because it has wii speak support or somethingdjda said:-Unknown- said:Does anybody know why Waninkoko didn't base his cIOS off of IOS37 (vs IOS38) which has USB support embedded in it as well?
There is a cIOS37 rev03 and rev02 well i have them so im guessing they exist. Im not sure if there waninkokos but it seems to be.
Thats what people say.tj_cool said:I think waninkoko based it on IOS38 because it has wii speak support or somethingdjda said:-Unknown- said:Does anybody know why Waninkoko didn't base his cIOS off of IOS37 (vs IOS38) which has USB support embedded in it as well?
There is a cIOS37 rev03 and rev02 well i have them so im guessing they exist. Im not sure if there waninkokos but it seems to be.
Sorry, I think my question was a silly one, IOS38 is just a newer IOS (vs IOS37) which is probably why Waninkoko based the new cIOS off of it. I think the only added feature on IOS37 over IOS36 is the RockBand instruments functionality.djda said:-Unknown- said:Does anybody know why Waninkoko didn't base his cIOS off of IOS37 (vs IOS38) which has USB support embedded in it as well?
There is a cIOS37 rev03 and rev02 well i have them so im guessing they exist. Im not sure if there waninkokos but it seems to be.
Please think... Formating your drive then putting everything back is a quickish way to defrag, i.e. format and reinstall windows for example-Unknown- said:How is writting 0s to a HDD's surface re-organizing the data (ie defragmenting) when you're eliminating all of the data? That's like saying leveling a building is a quickish way to clean it.manias said:periodic formatting is a quickish way to defrag that's all but the wbfs drives shouldn't really be fragmented to an extent that it would impact functionality so it's a bit useless unless games are broken
Where in your previous post did you mention anything about re-installing windows? You only mentioned it in your follow-up post.manias said:no, formating your drive then putting everything back is a quickish way to defrag, i.e. format and reinstall windows for example-Unknown- said:How is writting 0s to a HDD's surface re-organizing the data (ie defragmenting) when you're eliminating all of the data? That's like saying leveling a building is a quickish way to clean it.manias said:periodic formatting is a quickish way to defrag that's all but the wbfs drives shouldn't really be fragmented to an extent that it would impact functionality so it's a bit useless unless games are broken
read before ye reply...
No smartass ofcourse it's not exactly the same as defragmenting which is why i said it's a quick way to achieve the same thing. This is a wii forum nobody cares about stuff like this-Unknown- said:Where in your previous post did you mention anything about re-installing windows? You only mentioned it in your follow-up post. THE HORRORmanias said:no, formating your drive then putting everything back is a quickish way to defrag, i.e. format and reinstall windows for example-Unknown- said:How is writting 0s to a HDD's surface re-organizing the data (ie defragmenting) when you're eliminating all of the data? That's like saying leveling a building is a quickish way to clean it.manias said:periodic formatting is a quickish way to defrag that's all but the wbfs drives shouldn't really be fragmented to an extent that it would impact functionality so it's a bit useless unless games are broken
read before ye reply...
Notwithstanding, it is still not defragmenting your drive as you are simply re-installing your OS on a formatted drive. Defragmenting constitutes re-arranging data on an HDD to be stored in a contiguous manner on the drive, re-installing your OS does none of this.