11
May

Tricks to Boost speed of windows vista

   Posted by: utsav   in Tutorials

This is the First Part of a long tutorial to speed up windows vista

Performance is probably the most coveted intangible when it comes to PCs, and tweaking, to the performance hungry, is considered more of a necessity than an option. Gearheads go to great lengths to get quicker system response times, faster-running games, and shorter PC bootup and shutdown times.

One way is to overclock the heck out of the poor components (and then, for bragging rights, to log on to a message board and claim a stable CPU frequency of about 300MHz faster than what’s actually possible). Another way is to tweak out the operating system itself.

Unlike previous Microsoft operating systems, Windows Vista is pretty streamlined right out of the box. It makes terrific use of a system’s resources, but it’s built as much for pretty looks and increased stability and security as it is for horsepower. It’s time now for a course of action that will take the ball and chain off this baby and let it fly.

It’s very likely that more speed tips, registry hacks, and deep settings will be revealed in the weeks, months, and years to come. For now, here’s my set of tweaks that can help you turn up the throttle on your new operating system.

lots of other Web sites have published quite a few bytes of copy about how drivers for Vista are premature at best. Graphics drivers, especially, are hurting in terms of efficiency and stability. It’s likely that the biggest boost you’re likely to see will come in gradual increments as AMD, Nvidia, and other companies work out the wrinkles that prevent their hardware from performing at peak under the new OS.

The first step in optimizing Vista, then, is to keep your drivers up to date. Check for new drivers for all of your hardware often—daily, even. Not only can new drivers enhance performance, they should also gradually enable more features. We’re still waiting for better video quality from AMD’s ATI cards, for instance, and for a full feature set for Creative Labs’ SoundBlaster X-Fi cards.

Remove What You Don’t Need
If you installed Vista yourself and have experience installing previous Windows OSes, you surely noticed that Vista hardly asks any questions about your computer—and what you plan to do with it—than did prior OSes. Windows Vista makes all kinds of assumptions about your computing habits and the features you may or may not need, and it inevitably installs some overhead that you simply don’t need. You can get rid of it. Windows XP had the Add/Remove Windows Features button in the Control Panel Add/Remove Programs applet, and Vista has something like it.

  1. Open Control Panel and click Uninstall a Program to launch Vista’s Uninstall or Change a Program Window. In the Tasks pane on the left, click Turn Windows Features On or Off.
  2. Check the list of features. Each feature is preceded by a checkbox which, if filled, indicates the feature is installed. If you hover the mouse over a feature, a help tooltip appears to tell you what it is.

Do you really need Windows Meeting Space or Tablet PC components?

Do you really need Windows Meeting Space or Tablet PC components?

3. Uncheck any feature you don’t need. Some of the features are headings with a sub-list below them; just click the little + sign to expand.

For my gaming system, I’ve purged everything except:

* Some of the games
* XPS Viewer (under .NET Framework 3.0)
* Remote Differential Compression (a network optimizer)
* Windows Ultimate Extras

Note that when you uncheck features, you’re not removing these features from your system; you’re simply turning them off so they don’t sit in the background eating up resources. You can turn any of them back on by invoking this window and filling the checkboxes.

Next, it’s time to flush any services that you don’t want or need.

Click the Start button and type in services.msc and hit Enter. (The cursor jumps to the Search bar in the Start Menu when you click the Start button; you can usually just punch in whatever program or module you want to run right there).

The Services applet appears. Each service is basically a little nest of software support code for something the computer can monitor or do.

click to enlarge

Click to enlarge

Well-written services include a description of what they do (note that lots of third-party services don’t include a description, to which we say: shame). The Status column in the Services window shows whether or not the service has been started. Startup Type means how the service starts:

* Automatic means the service starts when Windows starts.
* Manual means the service starts when Windows detects that something needs it.
* Disabled means the service doesn’t start at all.

Most services are either set to Automatic or Manual. There’s no need to change any manual services; they only start when it’s necessary for them to do something. There are probably some automatic services you really don’t need, though. You can find a full list of services at TweakHound, an excellent source of all kinds of tweaks.

To change how a service starts, right-click it and click Properties. If you don’t want a service to load, first stop the service by clicking Stop. Then, pull down the Startup Type list and set the service to Manual or Disabled.

If you’re not sure about a service, it’s safer to set it to Manual; that way, if something calls it, it should start up. If you know you don’t need a service, set it to Disabled.

The services you need depend on what you do with your PC. For instance, if you’re not using ReadyBoost, you can disable that service; you can disable Windows Error Reporting if you don’t want to report errors; you can disable Tablet PC Input Service if you don’t want to use Tablet PC features; and so on.

You can almost certainly disable some services that start automatically by default:

* Computer Browser
* Distributed Link Tracking Client
* IKE and AuthIP IP Keying Modules
* Offline Files
* Remote Registry
* Tablet PC Input Service (unless you’re using a tablet PC)
* Windows Error Reporting

Some services that you absolutely should not disable include:

* Multimedia Class Scheduler
* Plug and Play
* Superfetch
* Task Scheduler
* Windows Audio
* Windows Driver Foundation

Feel free to experiment with services; just keep track of which services you tweak and, if something doesn’t work, re-enable the last service you turned off. Streamline the system by shutting down as many services as you can, based on your own unique needs.

As an example, here are the services I’ve disabled on my networked gaming machine:

* DFS Replication
* Computer Browser
* Distributed Link Tracking Client
* IKE and AuthIP IPsec Keying Modules
* IP Helper
* IPsec Policy Agent
* KtmRm for Distributed Transaction Coordinator
* Offline Files
* Remote Registry
* Secondary Logon
* Security Center (Use caution if you disable security services!)
* SSDP Discovery
* Tablet PC Input Service
* Terminal Services
* Windows Defender (Ditto the above warning!)
* Windows Error Reporting Service

Hose Out the Background
For the most streamlined operation, it’s essential that your computer has as few programs running in the background as possible. You can tell a bit about how much junk is running behind the scenes by looking at the system tray (the area next to the clock on the taskbar). The more icons you see there, the more stuff is running that you may not actually need.

I recommend a two-step process for getting rid of any background applets that you don’t need. Check out the tray icons and use the interfaces from those programs to disable them natively. Then, run good old MSCONFIG to clean out anything else.

First, look at the tray. Some of the stuff there belongs there; you might see a little speaker icon, a battery power icon, an icon for the Sidebar, network status icons, and a few other odds and ends that Windows puts in the tray. Look for third-party icons; in the picture shown here, QuickTime and Steam occupy parts of the tray.

Some of those programs don’t have to be there.

Right-click on any icons you find that aren’t simple Windows status icons. Look for a settings, properties, or a similar option. Then, in the resulting window, look for a way to prevent the program from loading when Windows starts. For example, to prevent Steam from automatically loading, you would:

1. Right-click the Steam tray icon.
2. Click Settings.
3. Click Interface (see the screenshot below).
4. Uncheck Run Steam When Windows Starts.
5. Click OK.

Quicktime, however, presents a challenge. You can tell it not to display the tray icon, but it will still run in the background. For that, and other programs that don’t always display tray icons, use the second method

STAY TUNED FOR PART 2

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This entry was posted on Sunday, May 11th, 2008 at 6:05 pm and is filed under Tutorials. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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