Disk Defragmentation Explained Disk defragmentation used to be surrounded in mystery with advice being to never touch your computer mouse while defrag is running, doing it in Safe Mode and bracing yourself for the possibility of data loss from occasional power failure. Many people still fear defragmentation or simply try not to think about it because of the old advice still coming up in internet searches. In this article I will try to explain disk defragmentation and all related notions in simple terms to eliminate every fear or myth associated with it. To understand what disk defragmentation is, one first needs to understand how a hard disk operates, what a file system is and how fragmentation really happens. These may sound like very technical terms, but the notions are in reality quite easy to comprehend with a little explaining and some illustrations. Let’s look at them here. How Your HDD Works Your HDD (hard disk drive) is the slowest part of your computer, because it contains moving parts - spinning platters and the read-write head. This is what it looks like inside your computer: