Hi ,
Thanks for posting in Microsoft communities.
As per your description provided you have mentioned that you have issues with your laptop slowing down and your hard drive mysteriously filling up with extra gigabytes even though you’re not downloading anything. Folders like 'WinSxS' and 'users', go on swollen by themselves as time pass on. But one fails to know how to reduce reduce this phenomenon. The windows user has no choice to delete some of these. When the swelling process reaches a certain limit, all on a sudden the whole C drive gets a red color on explorer, and the system stalls. This is in spite of the limited number of applications.
I would like to ask you few questions so that I can have a clear picture of the issue.
a. Are you getting any specific error while you use your computer?
b. Are there are antivirus software installed in your computer?
c. How much free disk space does the partition have and how large is the partition?
d. Did you run Disk Cleanup or Ccleaner before you started?
Whenever you install something on the Operating System a restore point automatically gets created. So, the hard disk space has decreased. But if you want, you can fix how much space you want to allocate for system restore.
Method 1 - As you have mentioned that your hard drive mysteriously filling up with extra gigabytes even though you’re not downloading anything.
Follow these steps given below:
a. Press Windows key + Pause/break key to open system properties.
b. Now select System Protection and select the drive in which you have installed the Operating
sys.
c. Select Customize and allocate the amount of drive space you want to allocate.
d. Click Ok.
I would like to refer a link regarding about how to improve performance by optimizing your drive, please click on the provided link below:
http://windows.microsoft.com/en-in/windows-8/improve-performance-optimizing-hard-drive
Due to the required space and filling the computer might act slow or may be other reason so in that case we can Check a drive for errors,
http://windows.microsoft.com/en-in/windows7/check-a-drive-for-errors
As per your questions:
How Long Should a Defrag Take?
Obviously, the time it takes for a disk to defragment will be different from computer to
computer and disk to disk. It depends on disk size, percent of disk use and amount of fragmentation. It depends on how big the disk is, how bad it is, how full it is, and what you have running at the same time.There is a possibility it might take total of about 10 hours and 12 passes. Also, after each pass, the computer has to "recollect" data which can take time. Fragmentation only
affects the speed that the particular file can be read/written at, as almost all of those files seem to be ones that don't actually matter (mainly installation files).
Let us know about the status of the issue. We would be happy to help you
further.