I thought that the MFT was placed where it was because, since the OS has to almost constantly access it, it needs to be "right in the middle of things" where the heads don't have to seek very far when going between the MFT and other parts of the files system. I don't believe that there actually is an advantage to placing it at either extreme on the drive. Not only is it the "master file table", but it actually contains the smaller (< 1,024 bytes?) files on the drive. I also don't believe that fragmentation causes as much of an issue with system performance on NTFS partitions as it does on FAT/FAT32 partitions. And I also know that, if fragmentation is performed daily (even on a really BIG drive) that each defrag run takes only a few seconds. (I'm using Exec Software's Diskeeper, not the somewhat crippled built-in defragger written by the same people.) At least that's my experience on our systems.
- Collin