I remember practicing with similar questions, and I think the tool we need is something like Disk Usage Analyzer, but I could be mixing it up with something else.
Okay, let me think about this. I'd probably start by looking at the system's event logs to see if there are any disk-related errors or warnings that could indicate a problem. Then I'd dig deeper from there.
Ooh, this is tricky. I might try checking the task manager or system monitor to see if there are any processes or applications hogging the disk. That could point me in the right direction.
Aha, this is a good one! I'd definitely use a tool like Windows Performance Monitor or Linux's 'iostat' command to get a detailed view of disk I/O activity and utilization.
I'm not totally sure about this one. Maybe I'd try running a disk performance monitoring tool to see if I can identify any bottlenecks or unusual activity?
Hmm, I think I'd start by checking the system logs for any disk-related errors or performance issues. That could give me some clues about where the problem might be.
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