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Pastimes : Computer Learning

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To: SI Ron (Crazy Music Man) who wrote (82277)6/18/2013 9:47:27 AM
From: goldworldnet   of 110652
 
Full formatting changed after XP which is much faster, but now I understand why. This article references Vista, but it's the same for Windows 7 & 8.
The format command behavior has changed in Windows Vista. By default in Windows Vista, the format command writes zeros to the whole disk when a full format is performed. In Windows XP and in earlier versions of the Windows operating system, the format command does not write zeros to the whole disk when a full format is performed.

The new format behavior may cause problems for the on-demand allocation modes that a volume storage provider, such as a Storage Area Network (SAN), supports. Problems may occur because the new format behavior prematurely triggers allocation of the backing space.

In the on-demand scenario, zeros do not have to be written to the whole disk because the volume storage provider initializes the on-demand-allocated data. To avoid causing unnecessary on-demand-allocation, you must use the quick format option.
support.microsoft.com

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