"It's fixed," Marcus said, watching the morning sun bleed through the blinds. "No downtime. No data loss."
Second click. .
At 4:48 AM, the final dialog box appeared: "All operations completed successfully. The system is stable."
This time, Paragon didn't just move data—it recalculated . It updated the partition table, shifted the starting blocks of the entire data partition, and verified every checksum along the way. The log window spammed lines of green text: "Extending filesystem... Relocating metadata... Committing transaction." paragon partition manager
Marcus rebooted the server into Windows. The login screen appeared in 22 seconds. He logged in, opened Disk Management, and exhaled.
The progress bar crawled. 10%... 40%... 75%. The server fans roared. Marcus stared at the "Pending Operations" list, his reflection ghostly on the dark monitor. Paragon was moving thousands of system files, bit by bit, defragmenting on the fly, ensuring the MFT (Master File Table) stayed intact. Any other tool would have ripped a hole in the filesystem. "It's fixed," Marcus said, watching the morning sun
The free space was trapped on the C: drive.
Sweat beading on his forehead, Marcus pulled a USB stick from his bag. On it, burned from a late-night emergency three years prior, was —the "Hard Disk Manager" suite. He’d bought the lifetime license after a near-miss with a corrupted external drive. Most people thought of partition tools as digital archaeology, a relic from the days of floppy disks. Marcus knew better. They were surgical scalpels. It updated the partition table, shifted the starting





