File interleaving does the exact opposite of a what a disk defragmentor does (which puts files in sequential order)... So why on Earth would you want to in essence 'fragment' a harddrive? Simple, when dealing with digital audio, it needs to read a little chunk at a time from each file, so in this special case (ie; multi-track digital audio), harddrive's fragmentation (the good kind) can
actually increase performance! And with that in mind, introducing AnalogX Interleave!
Our Review: This is an interesting application that will break up a digital audio track into multiple parts (as far as the PC is concerned anyway). By doing this it makes the rendering of digital audio a lot more efficient and clear. Just be careful when you run a Windows "defrag" - you'll be waving goodbye to any alterationsyou have made.