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How to increase system system performance

Discussion in 'Windows Vista' started by Tae Song, Jun 10, 2009.

  1. propman

    propman Guest

    Pegasus [MVP] wrote:<!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    > "Tae Song" <tae_song@hotmail.com> wrote in message
    > news:4E87102D-4004-4699-8BF6-3235EC1A5735@microsoft.com...<!--coloro:green--><span style="color:green <!--/coloro-->
    >> "Pegasus [MVP]" <news@microsoft.com> wrote in message
    >> news:O8a9Ndg6JHA.5012@TK2MSFTNGP05.phx.gbl...<!--coloro:darkred--><span style="color:darkred <!--/coloro-->
    >>> "Tae Song" <tae_song@hotmail.com> wrote in message
    >>> news:E4A312C4-33A9-4FD8-8FF7-59C4B4914442@microsoft.com...
    >>>> I thought I would share this with you all, a few little tricks to boost
    >>>> Windows performance.
    >>> Seeing that flash drives are much slower than hard disks, I wonder if
    >>> your measures have the desired effect. Could we have some performance
    >>> figures, complete with the test methods you applied so that anyone can
    >>> perform the same tests on his machine?
    >>><!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >> You have to take in to account access hard drives are mechanical and have
    >> access time of ms, where as flash drives have an access time down in to
    >> nanoseconds.<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >
    > Try this short paragraph for a starter:
    > "Modern flash drives have USB 2.0 connectivity. However, they do not
    > currently use the full 480 Mbit/s (60MB/s) the USB 2.0 Hi-Speed
    > specification supports due to technical limitations inherent in NAND flash.
    > The fastest drives currently available use a dual channel controller,
    > although they still fall considerably short of the transfer rate possible
    > from a current generation hard disk, or the maximum high speed USB
    > throughput."
    > Source:
    >
    > Or this:
    > "A typical "desktop HDD" might store between 120 GB and 2 TB although rarely
    > above 500GB of data (based on US market data[14]) rotate at 5,400 to 10,000
    > rpm and have a media transfer rate of 1 Gbit/s or higher. Some newer have
    > 3Gbit/s."
    > Source:

    >
    > Now go and do some actual measurements before claiming that your idea will
    > "increase" performance. It won't.
    >
    > <!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->

    ......and that information address's the following quote how?

    <quote on>
    This will cut down on I/O traffic to the hard drive. Starting an app
    like Word, would cause the HD to read the program into memory while at
    the same time writing into the drive, temporary files. This causes an
    I/O queue to form and degrade Windows performance. By off loading some
    of the I/O traffic to another storage device, the hard drive read/write
    head doesn't have to move around as much either. All performance gains.
    <quote off>
     
  2. Tae Song

    Tae Song Guest

    "Peter Foldes" <okf22@hotmail.com> wrote in message
    news:eq56qlh6JHA.1380@TK2MSFTNGP05.phx.gbl...<!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro--><!--coloro:green--><span style="color:green <!--/coloro-->
    >>Outlook does not work if you don't already have Outlook Express installed.<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >
    > Huh ??? What are you saying. For sure as I am typing this answer Outlook
    > works without having to have Outlook Express.
    >
    > Get your answers straight Tae Song
    > --
    > Peter
    >
    > Please Reply to Newsgroup for the benefit of others
    > Requests for assistance by email can not and will not be acknowledged.
    ><!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->

    For certain, if you install Office XP without Outlook Express on Vista.
    Outlook will come back with a message saying install Outlook Express.
    Outlook runs on top of Outlook Express.

    I was using Windows Live Mail, so I didn't bother. I noticed they released
    a service pack for Office XP today and by accident I startup Outlook and
    noticed I could get in.
     
  3. Tae Song

    Tae Song Guest

    "Pegasus [MVP]" <news@microsoft.com> wrote in message
    news:elhorlh6JHA.4116@TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl...<!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    >
    > "Tae Song" <tae_song@hotmail.com> wrote in message
    > news:4E87102D-4004-4699-8BF6-3235EC1A5735@microsoft.com...<!--coloro:green--><span style="color:green <!--/coloro-->
    >>
    >> "Pegasus [MVP]" <news@microsoft.com> wrote in message
    >> news:O8a9Ndg6JHA.5012@TK2MSFTNGP05.phx.gbl...<!--coloro:darkred--><span style="color:darkred <!--/coloro-->
    >>>
    >>> "Tae Song" <tae_song@hotmail.com> wrote in message
    >>> news:E4A312C4-33A9-4FD8-8FF7-59C4B4914442@microsoft.com...
    >>>>I thought I would share this with you all, a few little tricks to boost
    >>>>Windows performance.
    >>>
    >>> Seeing that flash drives are much slower than hard disks, I wonder if
    >>> your measures have the desired effect. Could we have some performance
    >>> figures, complete with the test methods you applied so that anyone can
    >>> perform the same tests on his machine?
    >>><!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >>
    >> You have to take in to account access hard drives are mechanical and have
    >> access time of ms, where as flash drives have an access time down in to
    >> nanoseconds.<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >
    > Try this short paragraph for a starter:
    > "Modern flash drives have USB 2.0 connectivity. However, they do not
    > currently use the full 480 Mbit/s (60MB/s) the USB 2.0 Hi-Speed
    > specification supports due to technical limitations inherent in NAND
    > flash. The fastest drives currently available use a dual channel
    > controller, although they still fall considerably short of the transfer
    > rate possible from a current generation hard disk, or the maximum high
    > speed USB throughput."
    > Source:
    ><!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->

    It says "currently" , but it doesn't say when it was written.

    Microsoft offers Readyboost, so perhaps things have changed since this was
    written.

    <!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    > Or this:
    > "A typical "desktop HDD" might store between 120 GB and 2 TB although
    > rarely above 500GB of data (based on US market data[14]) rotate at 5,400
    > to 10,000 rpm and have a media transfer rate of 1 Gbit/s or higher. Some
    > newer have 3Gbit/s."
    > Source:

    >
    > Now go and do some actual measurements before claiming that your idea will
    > "increase" performance. It won't.
    ><!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->

    My configuration isn't going to be the same as yours.

    Anyways it doesn't take any kind of test to know USB mass storage is still
    very fast.
     
  4. Only if you want to set up to read news groups. Outlook is email only! If
    you don't do news groups you don't need Outlook Express.



    --

    Richard Urban
    Microsoft MVP
    Windows Desktop Experience


    "Tae Song" <tae_song@hotmail.com> wrote in message
    news:9924FDC6-DB94-4D11-9DE9-CB31D0402E8A@microsoft.com...<!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    >
    > "Peter Foldes" <okf22@hotmail.com> wrote in message
    > news:eq56qlh6JHA.1380@TK2MSFTNGP05.phx.gbl...<!--coloro:green--><span style="color:green <!--/coloro--><!--coloro:darkred--><span style="color:darkred <!--/coloro-->
    >>>Outlook does not work if you don't already have Outlook Express
    >>>installed.<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >>
    >> Huh ??? What are you saying. For sure as I am typing this answer Outlook
    >> works without having to have Outlook Express.
    >>
    >> Get your answers straight Tae Song
    >> --
    >> Peter
    >>
    >> Please Reply to Newsgroup for the benefit of others
    >> Requests for assistance by email can not and will not be acknowledged.
    >><!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >
    > For certain, if you install Office XP without Outlook Express on Vista.
    > Outlook will come back with a message saying install Outlook Express.
    > Outlook runs on top of Outlook Express.
    >
    > I was using Windows Live Mail, so I didn't bother. I noticed they
    > released a service pack for Office XP today and by accident I startup
    > Outlook and noticed I could get in.
    >
    >
    > <!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
     
  5. Michael

    Michael Guest

    On Jun 10, 3:18 pm, "Pegasus [MVP]" <n...@microsoft.com> wrote:<!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    > "Tae Song" <tae_s...@hotmail.com> wrote in message
    >
    > news:4E87102D-4004-4699-8BF6-3235EC1A5735@microsoft.com...
    >
    >
    >
    >
    ><!--coloro:green--><span style="color:green <!--/coloro-->
    > > "Pegasus [MVP]" <n...@microsoft.com> wrote in message
    > >news:O8a9Ndg6JHA.5012@TK2MSFTNGP05.phx.gbl...<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    ><!--coloro:green--><span style="color:green <!--/coloro--><!--coloro:darkred--><span style="color:darkred <!--/coloro-->
    > >> "Tae Song" <tae_s...@hotmail.com> wrote in message
    > >>news:E4A312C4-33A9-4FD8-8FF7-59C4B4914442@microsoft.com...
    > >>>I thought I would share this with you all, a few little tricks to boost
    > >>>Windows performance.<!--colorc--><!--/colorc--><!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    ><!--coloro:green--><span style="color:green <!--/coloro--><!--coloro:darkred--><span style="color:darkred <!--/coloro-->
    > >> Seeing that flash drives are much slower than hard disks, I wonder if
    > >> your measures have the desired effect. Could we have some performance
    > >> figures, complete with the test methods you applied so that anyone can
    > >> perform the same tests on his machine?<!--colorc--><!--/colorc--><!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    ><!--coloro:green--><span style="color:green <!--/coloro-->
    > > You have to take in to account access hard drives are mechanical and have
    > > access time of ms, where as flash drives have an access time down in to
    > > nanoseconds.<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >
    > Try this short paragraph for a starter:
    > "Modern flash drives have USB 2.0 connectivity. However, they do not
    > currently use the full 480 Mbit/s (60MB/s) the USB 2.0 Hi-Speed
    > specification supports due to technical limitations inherent in NAND flash.
    > The fastest drives currently available use a dual channel controller,
    > although they still fall considerably short of the transfer rate possible
    > from a current generation hard disk, or the maximum high speed USB
    > throughput."
    > Source:
    >
    > Or this:
    > "A typical "desktop HDD" might store between 120 GB and 2 TB although rarely
    > above 500GB of data (based on US market data[14]) rotate at 5,400 to 10,000
    > rpm and have a media transfer rate of 1 Gbit/s or higher. Some newer have
    > 3Gbit/s."
    > Source:

    >
    > Now go and do some actual measurements before claiming that your idea will
    > "increase" performance. It won't.<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->

    Pegasus is right, I think what a lot of you don't understand about
    flash memory is that it's not access speeds that are fast, it
    ADRESSING (seek) speeds that are fast. Flash memory is very fast at
    being able to find data within the chip itself. But there are many
    more factors than just the addressing speed. First you have the USB
    port which is only capable of 480 Mbit/s versus today's SATA 3.0 Gbit/
    s. And both of those interfaces rarely if not never reach those ideal
    values. You have to keep in mind that the controller within a USB
    memory device is a huge limiting factor. The memory itself may be very
    fast, but the computer isn't talking to that, it's talking to its
    controller, and if you are using cheap USB sticks, then that
    controller is very likely to be low quality, and slow. Go google some
    benchmarks, you'll see that flash memory isn't all that fast.

    Moving page file and other things away form the OS drive, that I could
    see having some possible change. If you really want some significant
    speed increases, check out RAIDing and don't buy cheap RAM, and use a
    page file, page files do a whole lot more than dealing with minimized
    programs, there are tons of background applications that don't need to
    be in memory constantly because they don't do much once they are
    loaded (software updaters, printer/scanner stuff, etc).
     
  6. Folders and files in %TEMP% can grow to be larger than the total amount of
    RAM...

    On Wed, 10 Jun 2009 14:10:38 -0700, Jerry wrote:
    <!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    > Why not just create and RAMDRIVE and use it for the TMP/TEMP variables?
    >
    > "Tae Song" <tae_song@hotmail.com> wrote in message
    > news:E4A312C4-33A9-4FD8-8FF7-59C4B4914442@microsoft.com...<!--coloro:green--><span style="color:green <!--/coloro-->
    >>I thought I would share this with you all, a few little tricks to boost
    >>Windows performance.
    >>
    >> If you have a spare USB flash drive or you are willing to get a cheap say
    >> 1GB flash drive.
    >>
    >> First we plug in the flash drive.
    >>
    >> Go to Disk Manager and assign it a drive letter, like Z: (this is just to
    >> get it out of the way and optional)
    >>
    >> Go to Advanced system settings, Evironment variables.
    >>
    >> Change the Temp variable under User to Z: (I didn't see any point
    >> creating folders, but that's optional)
    >>
    >> Change the Temp variable under System variable to Z:
    >>
    >> This will cut down on I/O traffic to the hard drive. Starting an app like
    >> Word, would cause the HD to read the program into memory while at the same
    >> time writing into the drive, temporary files. This causes an I/O queue to
    >> form and degrade Windows performance. By off loading some of the I/O
    >> traffic to another storage device, the hard drive read/write head doesn't
    >> have to move around as much either. All performance gains.
    >>
    >> Another trick I tried was moving Windows Search Index to a flash drive,
    >> but it won't let me select even a 16GB flash drive. Even though the Index
    >> doesn't grow beyond 1GB. It's max size seems to be just under 1GB. You
    >> can move to it to a removable drive, though. I rebuilt the Index on an
    >> external 500GB USB drive. Again, this cuts down I/O traffic to the
    >> internal hard drive. More performance gain.
    >>
    >> Another idea I tried was creating a pagefile on a 16GB USB flash drive. I
    >> found out you can only have 4095MB pagefile or just under 25% of total
    >> capacity. I don't know what the rule of thumb is though, because on the
    >> internal 1TB hard drive I could create up to the max free space, which was
    >> about 700,000GB. Not that I needed that much, but just to test. I'm
    >> actually running with 4GB RAM and no page file, at the moment. Even with
    >> lots of 100MB picture (scanned documents/photos) open, virtual memory
    >> wasn't required. I would like to use most of an 8GB flash drive.
    >> Possibly use it for both temp files and virtual memory.
    >>
    >> I don't know if pagefile is the same thing as running ReadyBoost. I don't
    >> think it is, but I will have to look into that. I am not using
    >> Readyboost, since I read it doesn't do much good if you have more than 2GB
    >> of RAM.
    >>
    >> Now, if you have a 2nd or 3rd internal hard drive, you can create a
    >> pagefile on the 2nd drive and search index on the 3rd or index on 2nd and
    >> page file on 3rd. I highly recommended using a USB drive for temp files.
    >> 1-2GB are pretty cheap. I don't think you need a larger one unless you
    >> are working with full length movies, but I don't for certain.
    >>
    >> They do something like this on big database servers, some might refer to
    >> as "mainframes". The index and database are each on their own storage
    >> device. The aggregated bandwidth offers even better performance then RAID
    >> and the best part is you can implement it along side with RAID for insane
    >> amount of storage I/O performance.
    >>
    >> Anyways, that's it.
    >>
    >> If you need more detailed info on setting this up, leave a little note in
    >> the newsgroup. If I don't get to it, I'm sure someone else will help you
    >> out.<!--colorc--><!--/colorc--><!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->


    --
    Gene E. Bloch letters0x40blochg0x2Ecom
     
  7. Tae Song wrote:<!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    >
    > "Pegasus [MVP]" <news@microsoft.com> wrote in message
    > news:elhorlh6JHA.4116@TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl...<!--coloro:green--><span style="color:green <!--/coloro-->
    >>
    >> "Tae Song" <tae_song@hotmail.com> wrote in message
    >> news:4E87102D-4004-4699-8BF6-3235EC1A5735@microsoft.com...<!--coloro:darkred--><span style="color:darkred <!--/coloro-->
    >>>
    >>> "Pegasus [MVP]" <news@microsoft.com> wrote in message
    >>> news:O8a9Ndg6JHA.5012@TK2MSFTNGP05.phx.gbl...
    >>>>
    >>>> "Tae Song" <tae_song@hotmail.com> wrote in message
    >>>> news:E4A312C4-33A9-4FD8-8FF7-59C4B4914442@microsoft.com...
    >>>>> I thought I would share this with you all, a few little tricks to
    >>>>> boost Windows performance.
    >>>>
    >>>> Seeing that flash drives are much slower than hard disks, I wonder
    >>>> if your measures have the desired effect. Could we have some
    >>>> performance figures, complete with the test methods you applied so
    >>>> that anyone can perform the same tests on his machine?
    >>>>
    >>>
    >>> You have to take in to account access hard drives are mechanical and
    >>> have access time of ms, where as flash drives have an access time
    >>> down in to nanoseconds.<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >>
    >> Try this short paragraph for a starter:
    >> "Modern flash drives have USB 2.0 connectivity. However, they do not
    >> currently use the full 480 Mbit/s (60MB/s) the USB 2.0 Hi-Speed
    >> specification supports due to technical limitations inherent in NAND
    >> flash. The fastest drives currently available use a dual channel
    >> controller, although they still fall considerably short of the
    >> transfer rate possible from a current generation hard disk, or the
    >> maximum high speed USB throughput."
    >> Source:
    >><!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >
    > It says "currently" , but it doesn't say when it was written.
    >
    > Microsoft offers Readyboost, so perhaps things have changed since this
    > was written.<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->

    The Readyboost cache isn't necessarily faster than the pagefile, random
    reads are faster on flash drives but sequential reads are faster on hard
    disks. The Memory Manager will decide which is faster and where to get
    the cached information.

    For sequential read and writes USB flash drives are not faster than hard
    drives, they are much slower. That, along with the other "minor
    problems" mentioned in your other posts, are reason enough to forget
    about using this "performance" tweak.

    John
     
  8. "propman" <propman@nowhere.ca> wrote in message
    news:h0pcrq$jfs$1@news.eternal-september.org...<!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    > Pegasus [MVP] wrote:<!--coloro:green--><span style="color:green <!--/coloro-->
    >> "Tae Song" <tae_song@hotmail.com> wrote in message
    >> news:4E87102D-4004-4699-8BF6-3235EC1A5735@microsoft.com...<!--coloro:darkred--><span style="color:darkred <!--/coloro-->
    >>> "Pegasus [MVP]" <news@microsoft.com> wrote in message
    >>> news:O8a9Ndg6JHA.5012@TK2MSFTNGP05.phx.gbl...
    >>>> "Tae Song" <tae_song@hotmail.com> wrote in message
    >>>> news:E4A312C4-33A9-4FD8-8FF7-59C4B4914442@microsoft.com...
    >>>>> I thought I would share this with you all, a few little tricks to
    >>>>> boost Windows performance.
    >>>> Seeing that flash drives are much slower than hard disks, I wonder if
    >>>> your measures have the desired effect. Could we have some performance
    >>>> figures, complete with the test methods you applied so that anyone can
    >>>> perform the same tests on his machine?
    >>>>
    >>> You have to take in to account access hard drives are mechanical and
    >>> have access time of ms, where as flash drives have an access time down
    >>> in to nanoseconds.<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >>
    >> Try this short paragraph for a starter:
    >> "Modern flash drives have USB 2.0 connectivity. However, they do not
    >> currently use the full 480 Mbit/s (60MB/s) the USB 2.0 Hi-Speed
    >> specification supports due to technical limitations inherent in NAND
    >> flash. The fastest drives currently available use a dual channel
    >> controller, although they still fall considerably short of the transfer
    >> rate possible from a current generation hard disk, or the maximum high
    >> speed USB throughput."
    >> Source:
    >>
    >> Or this:
    >> "A typical "desktop HDD" might store between 120 GB and 2 TB although
    >> rarely above 500GB of data (based on US market data[14]) rotate at 5,400
    >> to 10,000 rpm and have a media transfer rate of 1 Gbit/s or higher. Some
    >> newer have 3Gbit/s."
    >> Source:

    >>
    >> Now go and do some actual measurements before claiming that your idea
    >> will "increase" performance. It won't.<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >
    > .....and that information address's [addresses?] the following quote how?
    >
    > <quote on>
    > This will cut down on I/O traffic to the hard drive. Starting an app like
    > Word, would cause the HD to read the program into memory while at the same
    > time writing into the drive, temporary files. This causes an I/O queue to
    > form and degrade Windows performance. By off loading some of the I/O
    > traffic to another storage device, the hard drive read/write head doesn't
    > have to move around as much either. All performance gains.
    > <quote off><!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->


    Nice words but so far the OP has not offered the slightest evidence that his
    idea speeds up a machine. Let's see a few tests that anyone can reproduce!
     
  9. Dalo Harkin

    Dalo Harkin Guest

    Just read this lol -

    Three words - solid state disks


    --
    Dalo Harkin
    Posted via
     
  10. Monitor

    Monitor Guest

    "Tae Song" <tae_song@hotmail.com> wrote in message
    news:E4A312C4-33A9-4FD8-8FF7-59C4B4914442@microsoft.com...<!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    >I thought I would share this with you all, a few little tricks to boost
    >Windows performance.
    >
    > If you have a spare USB flash drive or you are willing to get a cheap say
    > 1GB flash drive.
    >
    > First we plug in the flash drive.
    >
    > Go to Disk Manager and assign it a drive letter, like Z: (this is just to
    > get it out of the way and optional)
    >
    > Go to Advanced system settings, Evironment variables.
    >
    > Change the Temp variable under User to Z: (I didn't see any point
    > creating folders, but that's optional)
    >
    > Change the Temp variable under System variable to Z:
    >
    > This will cut down on I/O traffic to the hard drive. Starting an app like
    > Word, would cause the HD to read the program into memory while at the same
    > time writing into the drive, temporary files. This causes an I/O queue to
    > form and degrade Windows performance. By off loading some of the I/O
    > traffic to another storage device, the hard drive read/write head doesn't
    > have to move around as much either. All performance gains.
    >
    > Another trick I tried was moving Windows Search Index to a flash drive,
    > but it won't let me select even a 16GB flash drive. Even though the Index
    > doesn't grow beyond 1GB. It's max size seems to be just under 1GB. You
    > can move to it to a removable drive, though. I rebuilt the Index on an
    > external 500GB USB drive. Again, this cuts down I/O traffic to the
    > internal hard drive. More performance gain.
    >
    > Another idea I tried was creating a pagefile on a 16GB USB flash drive. I
    > found out you can only have 4095MB pagefile or just under 25% of total
    > capacity. I don't know what the rule of thumb is though, because on the
    > internal 1TB hard drive I could create up to the max free space, which was
    > about 700,000GB. Not that I needed that much, but just to test. I'm
    > actually running with 4GB RAM and no page file, at the moment. Even with
    > lots of 100MB picture (scanned documents/photos) open, virtual memory
    > wasn't required. I would like to use most of an 8GB flash drive.
    > Possibly use it for both temp files and virtual memory.
    >
    > I don't know if pagefile is the same thing as running ReadyBoost. I don't
    > think it is, but I will have to look into that. I am not using
    > Readyboost, since I read it doesn't do much good if you have more than 2GB
    > of RAM.
    >
    > Now, if you have a 2nd or 3rd internal hard drive, you can create a
    > pagefile on the 2nd drive and search index on the 3rd or index on 2nd and
    > page file on 3rd. I highly recommended using a USB drive for temp files.
    > 1-2GB are pretty cheap. I don't think you need a larger one unless you
    > are working with full length movies, but I don't for certain.
    >
    > They do something like this on big database servers, some might refer to
    > as "mainframes". The index and database are each on their own storage
    > device. The aggregated bandwidth offers even better performance then RAID
    > and the best part is you can implement it along side with RAID for insane
    > amount of storage I/O performance.
    >
    > Anyways, that's it.
    >
    > If you need more detailed info on setting this up, leave a little note in
    > the newsgroup. If I don't get to it, I'm sure someone else will help you
    > out.<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->

    Here is how geniuses work:
    1. They have a brilliant idea.
    2. They test it.
    3. They test it again.
    4. They have it verified by someone else.
    5. They publish it.
    6. They enjoy the praise and the fame.

    It seems you jumped from Step 1 directly to Step 5, expecting to be showered
    with praise. Instead you need to scrape a lot of egg off your face.
     
  11. Tae Song

    Tae Song Guest

    "Monitor" <nospam@spam.com> wrote in message
    news:uAFntBn6JHA.1196@TK2MSFTNGP03.phx.gbl...<!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    >
    > "Tae Song" <tae_song@hotmail.com> wrote in message
    > news:E4A312C4-33A9-4FD8-8FF7-59C4B4914442@microsoft.com...<!--coloro:green--><span style="color:green <!--/coloro-->
    >>I thought I would share this with you all, a few little tricks to boost
    >>Windows performance.
    >>
    >> If you have a spare USB flash drive or you are willing to get a cheap say
    >> 1GB flash drive.
    >>
    >> First we plug in the flash drive.
    >>
    >> Go to Disk Manager and assign it a drive letter, like Z: (this is just
    >> to get it out of the way and optional)
    >>
    >> Go to Advanced system settings, Evironment variables.
    >>
    >> Change the Temp variable under User to Z: (I didn't see any point
    >> creating folders, but that's optional)
    >>
    >> Change the Temp variable under System variable to Z:
    >>
    >> This will cut down on I/O traffic to the hard drive. Starting an app
    >> like Word, would cause the HD to read the program into memory while at
    >> the same time writing into the drive, temporary files. This causes an
    >> I/O queue to form and degrade Windows performance. By off loading some
    >> of the I/O traffic to another storage device, the hard drive read/write
    >> head doesn't have to move around as much either. All performance gains.
    >>
    >> Another trick I tried was moving Windows Search Index to a flash drive,
    >> but it won't let me select even a 16GB flash drive. Even though the
    >> Index doesn't grow beyond 1GB. It's max size seems to be just under 1GB.
    >> You can move to it to a removable drive, though. I rebuilt the Index on
    >> an external 500GB USB drive. Again, this cuts down I/O traffic to the
    >> internal hard drive. More performance gain.
    >>
    >> Another idea I tried was creating a pagefile on a 16GB USB flash drive.
    >> I found out you can only have 4095MB pagefile or just under 25% of total
    >> capacity. I don't know what the rule of thumb is though, because on the
    >> internal 1TB hard drive I could create up to the max free space, which
    >> was about 700,000GB. Not that I needed that much, but just to test. I'm
    >> actually running with 4GB RAM and no page file, at the moment. Even with
    >> lots of 100MB picture (scanned documents/photos) open, virtual memory
    >> wasn't required. I would like to use most of an 8GB flash drive.
    >> Possibly use it for both temp files and virtual memory.
    >>
    >> I don't know if pagefile is the same thing as running ReadyBoost. I
    >> don't think it is, but I will have to look into that. I am not using
    >> Readyboost, since I read it doesn't do much good if you have more than
    >> 2GB of RAM.
    >>
    >> Now, if you have a 2nd or 3rd internal hard drive, you can create a
    >> pagefile on the 2nd drive and search index on the 3rd or index on 2nd and
    >> page file on 3rd. I highly recommended using a USB drive for temp files.
    >> 1-2GB are pretty cheap. I don't think you need a larger one unless you
    >> are working with full length movies, but I don't for certain.
    >>
    >> They do something like this on big database servers, some might refer to
    >> as "mainframes". The index and database are each on their own storage
    >> device. The aggregated bandwidth offers even better performance then RAID
    >> and the best part is you can implement it along side with RAID for insane
    >> amount of storage I/O performance.
    >>
    >> Anyways, that's it.
    >>
    >> If you need more detailed info on setting this up, leave a little note in
    >> the newsgroup. If I don't get to it, I'm sure someone else will help you
    >> out.<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >
    > Here is how geniuses work:
    > 1. They have a brilliant idea.
    > 2. They test it.
    > 3. They test it again.
    > 4. They have it verified by someone else.
    > 5. They publish it.
    > 6. They enjoy the praise and the fame.
    >
    > It seems you jumped from Step 1 directly to Step 5, expecting to be
    > showered with praise. Instead you need to scrape a lot of egg off your
    > face.
    >
    ><!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->

    Thank you, I thought it was good idea too.

    I never expected praise, I just thought it was an idea worth trying out.

    I never claim to be a genius, but thanks for the benefit of the doubt.

    I eat eggs breakfast... so I can live with it.

    Here is another idea, I don't know if anyone thought of it before...

    How about Windows support for MAID (massive array of inexpensive drives)
    using USB flash drives.

    Would that be cool or what?
     
  12. R. C. White

    R. C. White Guest

    Hi, Tae Song.

    Most of your posts in other threads sound intelligent. And this thread
    started off sounding like a possibly good idea. But then, in your third
    post, you said this:

    "I started up Outlook (which today's service pack for Office XP fixed. In
    Office XP, Outlook does not work if you don't already have Outlook Express
    installed. It hadn't worked till early today after the latest update. I
    never installed Outlook Express on this Vista system.)"

    That paragraph lost all your credibility for me. :>(

    First, of course, "Outlook does not work if you don't already have Outlook
    Express" is an obviously false claim, because many of us are running
    Outlook in Vista and Win7 RC. And then you said, "I never installed Outlook
    Express on this Vista system." This indicates a serious lack of knowledge
    of both OE and Vista, because OE cannot be installed on Vista.

    At that point, I turned you off and read the rest of the thread just to see
    how far you would go and whether others would correct your errors. :>( I'm
    glad to see that several knowledgeable readers did.

    RC
    --
    R. C. White, CPA
    San Marcos, TX
    rc@grandecom.net
    Microsoft Windows MVP
    Windows Live Mail 2009 (14.0.8064.0206) in Win7 Ultimate x64 RC 7100

    "Tae Song" <tae_song@hotmail.com> wrote in message
    news:E4A312C4-33A9-4FD8-8FF7-59C4B4914442@microsoft.com...<!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    > I thought I would share this with you all, a few little tricks to boost
    > Windows performance.<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->

    <SNIP long cross-posted post full of inaccurate information and advice>
    <!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    > If you need more detailed info on setting this up, leave a little note in
    > the newsgroup. If I don't get to it, I'm sure someone else will help you
    > out. <!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
     
  13. Tae Song

    Tae Song Guest

    "R. C. White" <rc@grandecom.net> wrote in message
    news:uKfvGir6JHA.5008@TK2MSFTNGP05.phx.gbl...<!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    > Hi, Tae Song.
    >
    > Most of your posts in other threads sound intelligent. And this thread
    > started off sounding like a possibly good idea. But then, in your third
    > post, you said this:
    >
    > "I started up Outlook (which today's service pack for Office XP fixed. In
    > Office XP, Outlook does not work if you don't already have Outlook Express
    > installed. It hadn't worked till early today after the latest update. I
    > never installed Outlook Express on this Vista system.)"
    >
    > That paragraph lost all your credibility for me. :>(
    >
    > First, of course, "Outlook does not work if you don't already have Outlook
    > Express" is an obviously false claim, because many of us are running
    > Outlook in Vista and Win7 RC. And then you said, "I never installed
    > Outlook Express on this Vista system." This indicates a serious lack of
    > knowledge of both OE and Vista, because OE cannot be installed on Vista.
    >
    > At that point, I turned you off and read the rest of the thread just to
    > see how far you would go and whether others would correct your errors.
    > :>( I'm glad to see that several knowledgeable readers did.
    >
    > RC
    > --
    > R. C. White, CPA
    > San Marcos, TX
    > rc@grandecom.net
    > Microsoft Windows MVP
    > Windows Live Mail 2009 (14.0.8064.0206) in Win7 Ultimate x64 RC 7100
    >
    > "Tae Song" <tae_song@hotmail.com> wrote in message
    > news:E4A312C4-33A9-4FD8-8FF7-59C4B4914442@microsoft.com...<!--coloro:green--><span style="color:green <!--/coloro-->
    >> I thought I would share this with you all, a few little tricks to boost
    >> Windows performance.<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >
    > <SNIP long cross-posted post full of inaccurate information and advice>
    ><!--coloro:green--><span style="color:green <!--/coloro-->
    >> If you need more detailed info on setting this up, leave a little note in
    >> the newsgroup. If I don't get to it, I'm sure someone else will help you
    >> out.<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    ><!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->


    Why Outlook 2002 and 2003 require Outlook Express
     
  14. Tom Willett

    Tom Willett Guest

    The whole thing is a moot point. OE is always installed on the computer, and
    can't be uninstalled from the O/S. You can take away access to it, but you
    can uninstall it. Not without causing serious problems, anyway.

    "Tae Song" <tae_song@hotmail.com> wrote in message
    news:719E396C-A711-4E7E-B97D-BB79EB6B5DB5@microsoft.com...
    :
    : "R. C. White" <rc@grandecom.net> wrote in message
    : news:uKfvGir6JHA.5008@TK2MSFTNGP05.phx.gbl...
    : > Hi, Tae Song.
    : >
    : > Most of your posts in other threads sound intelligent. And this thread
    : > started off sounding like a possibly good idea. But then, in your third
    : > post, you said this:
    : >
    : > "I started up Outlook (which today's service pack for Office XP fixed.
    In
    : > Office XP, Outlook does not work if you don't already have Outlook
    Express
    : > installed. It hadn't worked till early today after the latest update.
    I
    : > never installed Outlook Express on this Vista system.)"
    : >
    : > That paragraph lost all your credibility for me. :>(
    : >
    : > First, of course, "Outlook does not work if you don't already have
    Outlook
    : > Express" is an obviously false claim, because many of us are running
    : > Outlook in Vista and Win7 RC. And then you said, "I never installed
    : > Outlook Express on this Vista system." This indicates a serious lack of
    : > knowledge of both OE and Vista, because OE cannot be installed on Vista.
    : >
    : > At that point, I turned you off and read the rest of the thread just to
    : > see how far you would go and whether others would correct your errors.
    : > :>( I'm glad to see that several knowledgeable readers did.
    : >
    : > RC
    : > --
    : > R. C. White, CPA
    : > San Marcos, TX
    : > rc@grandecom.net
    : > Microsoft Windows MVP
    : > Windows Live Mail 2009 (14.0.8064.0206) in Win7 Ultimate x64 RC 7100
    : >
    : > "Tae Song" <tae_song@hotmail.com> wrote in message
    : > news:E4A312C4-33A9-4FD8-8FF7-59C4B4914442@microsoft.com...
    : >> I thought I would share this with you all, a few little tricks to boost
    : >> Windows performance.
    : >
    : > <SNIP long cross-posted post full of inaccurate information and advice>
    : >
    : >> If you need more detailed info on setting this up, leave a little note
    in
    : >> the newsgroup. If I don't get to it, I'm sure someone else will help
    you
    : >> out.
    : >
    :
    :
    : Why Outlook 2002 and 2003 require Outlook Express
    :
    :
    :
    :
     
  15. Tae Song

    Tae Song Guest

    "Tom Willett" <tom@youreadaisyifyoudo.com> wrote in message
    news:#BivIFs6JHA.1716@TK2MSFTNGP03.phx.gbl...<!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    > The whole thing is a moot point. OE is always installed on the computer,
    > and
    > can't be uninstalled from the O/S. You can take away access to it, but you
    > can uninstall it. Not without causing serious problems, anyway.
    >
    > "Tae Song" <tae_song@hotmail.com> wrote in message
    > news:719E396C-A711-4E7E-B97D-BB79EB6B5DB5@microsoft.com...
    > :
    > : "R. C. White" <rc@grandecom.net> wrote in message
    > : news:uKfvGir6JHA.5008@TK2MSFTNGP05.phx.gbl...
    > : > Hi, Tae Song.
    > : >
    > : > Most of your posts in other threads sound intelligent. And this
    > thread
    > : > started off sounding like a possibly good idea. But then, in your
    > third
    > : > post, you said this:
    > : >
    > : > "I started up Outlook (which today's service pack for Office XP fixed.
    > In
    > : > Office XP, Outlook does not work if you don't already have Outlook
    > Express
    > : > installed. It hadn't worked till early today after the latest update.
    > I
    > : > never installed Outlook Express on this Vista system.)"
    > : >
    > : > That paragraph lost all your credibility for me. :>(
    > : >
    > : > First, of course, "Outlook does not work if you don't already have
    > Outlook
    > : > Express" is an obviously false claim, because many of us are running
    > : > Outlook in Vista and Win7 RC. And then you said, "I never installed
    > : > Outlook Express on this Vista system." This indicates a serious lack
    > of
    > : > knowledge of both OE and Vista, because OE cannot be installed on
    > Vista.
    > : >
    > : > At that point, I turned you off and read the rest of the thread just
    > to
    > : > see how far you would go and whether others would correct your errors.
    > : > :>( I'm glad to see that several knowledgeable readers did.
    > : >
    > : > RC
    > : > --
    > : > R. C. White, CPA
    > : > San Marcos, TX
    > : > rc@grandecom.net
    > : > Microsoft Windows MVP
    > : > Windows Live Mail 2009 (14.0.8064.0206) in Win7 Ultimate x64 RC 7100
    > : >
    > : > "Tae Song" <tae_song@hotmail.com> wrote in message
    > : > news:E4A312C4-33A9-4FD8-8FF7-59C4B4914442@microsoft.com...
    > : >> I thought I would share this with you all, a few little tricks to
    > boost
    > : >> Windows performance.
    > : >
    > : > <SNIP long cross-posted post full of inaccurate information and
    > advice>
    > : >
    > : >> If you need more detailed info on setting this up, leave a little
    > note
    > in
    > : >> the newsgroup. If I don't get to it, I'm sure someone else will help
    > you
    > : >> out.
    > : >
    > :
    > :
    > : Why Outlook 2002 and 2003 require Outlook Express
    > :
    > :
    > :
    > :
    >
    ><!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->

    Windows Vista doesn't come with Outlook Express at all, it comes with
    Windows Mail.
     
  16. R. C. White

    R. C. White Guest

    Hi, Tae Song.

    You were misled by an out-of-date KB article that has not been updated to
    recognize Vista, even though it says "Last Review: May 4, 2009". It applies
    only to Outlook 2002 and 2003, both of which predate Vista by several years.
    I'll try to bring this to the attention of someone at Microsoft to get it
    corrected.

    You've cross-posted to two WinXP NGs AND to two Vista NGs.

    You have an excuse, but you still are wrong. :^{

    RC
    --
    R. C. White, CPA
    San Marcos, TX
    rc@grandecom.net
    Microsoft Windows MVP
    Windows Live Mail 2009 (14.0.8064.0206) in Win7 Ultimate x64 RC 7100

    "Tae Song" <tae_song@hotmail.com> wrote in message
    news:719E396C-A711-4E7E-B97D-BB79EB6B5DB5@microsoft.com...<!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    >
    > "R. C. White" <rc@grandecom.net> wrote in message
    > news:uKfvGir6JHA.5008@TK2MSFTNGP05.phx.gbl...<!--coloro:green--><span style="color:green <!--/coloro-->
    >> Hi, Tae Song.
    >>
    >> Most of your posts in other threads sound intelligent. And this thread
    >> started off sounding like a possibly good idea. But then, in your third
    >> post, you said this:
    >>
    >> "I started up Outlook (which today's service pack for Office XP fixed.
    >> In
    >> Office XP, Outlook does not work if you don't already have Outlook
    >> Express
    >> installed. It hadn't worked till early today after the latest update. I
    >> never installed Outlook Express on this Vista system.)"
    >>
    >> That paragraph lost all your credibility for me. :>(
    >>
    >> First, of course, "Outlook does not work if you don't already have
    >> Outlook Express" is an obviously false claim, because many of us are
    >> running Outlook in Vista and Win7 RC. And then you said, "I never
    >> installed Outlook Express on this Vista system." This indicates a
    >> serious lack of knowledge of both OE and Vista, because OE cannot be
    >> installed on Vista.
    >>
    >> At that point, I turned you off and read the rest of the thread just to
    >> see how far you would go and whether others would correct your errors.
    >> :>( I'm glad to see that several knowledgeable readers did.
    >>
    >> RC
    >>
    >> "Tae Song" <tae_song@hotmail.com> wrote in message
    >> news:E4A312C4-33A9-4FD8-8FF7-59C4B4914442@microsoft.com...<!--coloro:darkred--><span style="color:darkred <!--/coloro-->
    >>> I thought I would share this with you all, a few little tricks to boost
    >>> Windows performance.<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >>
    >> <SNIP long cross-posted post full of inaccurate information and advice>
    >><!--coloro:darkred--><span style="color:darkred <!--/coloro-->
    >>> If you need more detailed info on setting this up, leave a little note
    >>> in the newsgroup. If I don't get to it, I'm sure someone else will help
    >>> you out.<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >><!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >
    >
    > Why Outlook 2002 and 2003 require Outlook Express
    > <!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
     
  17. Unknown

    Unknown Guest

    "Tom Willett" <tom@youreadaisyifyoudo.com> wrote in message
    news:%23BivIFs6JHA.1716@TK2MSFTNGP03.phx.gbl...<!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    > The whole thing is a moot point. OE is always installed on the computer,
    > and
    > can't be uninstalled from the O/S. You can take away access to it, but you
    > can uninstall it. Not without causing serious problems, anyway.<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    You meant CAN'T on this last line??????
     
  18. Tae Song

    Tae Song Guest

    "R. C. White" <rc@grandecom.net> wrote in message
    news:OYB0Xus6JHA.4100@TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl...<!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    > Hi, Tae Song.
    >
    > You were misled by an out-of-date KB article that has not been updated to
    > recognize Vista, even though it says "Last Review: May 4, 2009". It
    > applies only to Outlook 2002 and 2003, both of which predate Vista by
    > several years. I'll try to bring this to the attention of someone at
    > Microsoft to get it corrected.
    >
    > You've cross-posted to two WinXP NGs AND to two Vista NGs.
    >
    > You have an excuse, but you still are wrong. :^{
    >
    > RC
    > --
    > R. C. White, CPA
    > San Marcos, TX
    > rc@grandecom.net
    > Microsoft Windows MVP
    > Windows Live Mail 2009 (14.0.8064.0206) in Win7 Ultimate x64 RC 7100
    >
    > "Tae Song" <tae_song@hotmail.com> wrote in message
    > news:719E396C-A711-4E7E-B97D-BB79EB6B5DB5@microsoft.com...<!--coloro:green--><span style="color:green <!--/coloro-->
    >>
    >> "R. C. White" <rc@grandecom.net> wrote in message
    >> news:uKfvGir6JHA.5008@TK2MSFTNGP05.phx.gbl...<!--coloro:darkred--><span style="color:darkred <!--/coloro-->
    >>> Hi, Tae Song.
    >>>
    >>> Most of your posts in other threads sound intelligent. And this thread
    >>> started off sounding like a possibly good idea. But then, in your third
    >>> post, you said this:
    >>>
    >>> "I started up Outlook (which today's service pack for Office XP fixed.
    >>> In
    >>> Office XP, Outlook does not work if you don't already have Outlook
    >>> Express
    >>> installed. It hadn't worked till early today after the latest update.
    >>> I
    >>> never installed Outlook Express on this Vista system.)"
    >>>
    >>> That paragraph lost all your credibility for me. :>(
    >>>
    >>> First, of course, "Outlook does not work if you don't already have
    >>> Outlook Express" is an obviously false claim, because many of us are
    >>> running Outlook in Vista and Win7 RC. And then you said, "I never
    >>> installed Outlook Express on this Vista system." This indicates a
    >>> serious lack of knowledge of both OE and Vista, because OE cannot be
    >>> installed on Vista.
    >>>
    >>> At that point, I turned you off and read the rest of the thread just to
    >>> see how far you would go and whether others would correct your errors.
    >>> :>( I'm glad to see that several knowledgeable readers did.
    >>>
    >>> RC
    >>>
    >>> "Tae Song" <tae_song@hotmail.com> wrote in message
    >>> news:E4A312C4-33A9-4FD8-8FF7-59C4B4914442@microsoft.com...
    >>>> I thought I would share this with you all, a few little tricks to boost
    >>>> Windows performance.
    >>>
    >>> <SNIP long cross-posted post full of inaccurate information and advice>
    >>>
    >>>> If you need more detailed info on setting this up, leave a little note
    >>>> in the newsgroup. If I don't get to it, I'm sure someone else will
    >>>> help you out.
    >>><!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >>
    >>
    >> Why Outlook 2002 and 2003 require Outlook Express
    >> <!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >
    ><!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->

    Read the through the thread, I said I have Office XP installed. Office XP
    installs Outlook 2002, which didn't work until the recent Office XP update
    couple days ago.
     
  19. Tom Willett

    Tom Willett Guest

    "Unknown" <unknown@unknown.kom> wrote in message
    news:6adYl.31708$yr3.20734@nlpi068.nbdc.sbc.com...
    :
    : "Tom Willett" <tom@youreadaisyifyoudo.com> wrote in message
    : news:%23BivIFs6JHA.1716@TK2MSFTNGP03.phx.gbl...
    : > The whole thing is a moot point. OE is always installed on the computer,
    : > and
    : > can't be uninstalled from the O/S. You can take away access to it, but
    you
    : > can uninstall it. Not without causing serious problems, anyway.
    : You meant CAN'T on this last line??????

    Yep.
    :
    :
     
  20. Tae Song

    Tae Song Guest

    "Bill in Co." <not_really_here@earthlink.net> wrote in message
    news:Ob3B5Pg6JHA.4864@TK2MSFTNGP03.phx.gbl...<!--coloro:blue--><span style="color:blue <!--/coloro-->
    > Tae Song wrote:<!--coloro:green--><span style="color:green <!--/coloro-->
    >> I thought I would share this with you all, a few little tricks to boost
    >> Windows performance.
    >>
    >> If you have a spare USB flash drive or you are willing to get a cheap say
    >> 1GB flash drive.
    >>
    >> First we plug in the flash drive.
    >>
    >> Go to Disk Manager and assign it a drive letter, like Z: (this is just
    >> to
    >> get it out of the way and optional)
    >>
    >> Go to Advanced system settings, Evironment variables.
    >>
    >> Change the Temp variable under User to Z: (I didn't see any point
    >> creating
    >> folders, but that's optional)
    >>
    >> Change the Temp variable under System variable to Z:
    >>
    >> This will cut down on I/O traffic to the hard drive. Starting an app
    >> like
    >> Word, would cause the HD to read the program into memory while at the
    >> same
    >> time writing into the drive, temporary files. This causes an I/O queue
    >> to
    >> form and degrade Windows performance. By off loading some of the I/O
    >> traffic to another storage device, the hard drive read/write head doesn't
    >> have to move around as much either. All performance gains.<!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->
    >
    > I don't think so!! There will be a performance LOSS, in large part due
    > to the much longer write times to a flash drive. Also, it's generally a
    > poor idea to have so many continuous writes to a flash drive, as flash
    > drives have a more limited number of write cycles.
    >
    > <snip> rest of this post
    ><!--colorc--><!--/colorc-->

    You don't need an extremely high write speed. A lot of times temp files are
    just empty files, many are 0 bytes. Almost all are under 700KB. Even at a
    write speed of of say a low of 5MB/s is still only a fraction of a sec.

    This keeps the read/write head from thrashing about creating and updating
    file records.

    And just to up the ante, I enabled disk compression on the USB drives to
    reduce the size of the writes.
     

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