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mémoire système

Vous passez en revue actuellement les articles de Logiciel compatible de Vista de MS Windows assortiment de la catégorie mémoire système.

Trop de cachette de Windows Vista peut-elle être une mauvaise chose ?

Trop de cachette de Windows Vista, mauvais ting ? Bien, apparent oui, par excessif caché écrivez l'entrée-sortie et l'entrée-sortie lue cachée excessive. Comme vous savez probablement à ce jour, la cachette est reliée à amplifier l'exécution des processus d'accès aux données qui visent des supports de stockage lents. Dans un scénario idéal, les données ou les pages de code seraient complètement plac dans la mémoire système. La vitesse à laquelle des données sont accédées, dans la RAM physique, excède de loin cela des processus semblables qui impliquent un disque dur, par approximativement 1 million de fois. Mais, en raison de la quantité habituellement limitée de RAM, le logiciel d'exploitation devra traiter la cachette de système. (plus…)

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Écrit par Jason dessus 29 novembre 2007 avec aucuns commentaires.
Lisez plus d'articles dessus otherSoftware et processus et algorithme et supports de stockage et exécution de système et cachette de système et msdn et mémoire système et logiciel d'exploitation et Vista et Disque dur et mémoire physique et RAM physique et directeur de mémoire et Windows.

Coups secs de Vista du principal 12

Nous avons filtré et assorti par les centaines de conseils et coups secs de Vista pour trouver ceux que nous pensons les la plupart des lecteurs trouvera utile. Tandis que Vista se sent toujours nouveau, ces conseils et coups secs pourraient vous aider à arranger dans votre OS.

Introduction
Ainsi vous avez installé Vista, peut-être contre votre meilleur jugement, et maintenant se demander€ de ™re de youâ ce que vous pouvez faire pour le parer vers le haut d'un peu. La droite€ de ™re de Weâ là avec toi, et ont versé au-dessus du Web recherchant les coups secs les plus frais et plus-utiles que nous pourrions trouver. Nous avons recherché la haute et le bas, et avons rempli cette liste de coups secs de sorte que vous pas ayez dû. We have personally tested all of these tweaks and employ most of them on our own systems. (more…)

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Written by Jason on November 25th, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on ctrl key and backup power and drive performance and folder icons and power source and office documents and otherSoftware and device manager and tweaks and vista and windows explorer and system memory and advanced performance and Windows.

Keep Windows operating data in main memory

Windows XP contains several tweakable memory settings in the registry, one of which is the DisablePagingExecutive registry key. This controls whether the operating system will transfer its essential driver and kernel files to the ‘virtual memory’ (the page file on the hard disk). It defaults to allowing this.

Obviously, transferring portions of the system to hard drive memory can considerably slow things down, and it appears that Windows XP does this periodically, whether or not the system is actually low on physical memory (RAM).

If you have 256MB of system memory or more, try this registry tweak to force Windows to keep its operating data in main memory: (more…)

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Written by Jason on November 18th, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on open regedit and memory management and drive memory and main memory and registry tweak and memory settings and hkey local machine and system memory and xp and Windows XP and memory ram and physical memory and virtual memory and Windows.

Installing the Upgrade on a Blank Hard Drive

Few days back, I bought Windows Vista Business Upgrade the other day so I could start playing with it. Since I did not want to mess up the configuration of my current computer, I thought I would install Vista on a blank hard drive.

Sounds easy enough, after all the previous versions of Windows required you to have a legitimate copy of an older Windows operating system and simply asked for that copy during the install so they could verify upgrade compliance.

Before installing Windows Vista, I ran the Windows Vista Upgrade Advisor on my current system. As I suspected, my video card was not up to Vista standards and the 512MB of RAM was on the low end of what Vista wanted. (more…)

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Written by Jason on November 17th, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on current system and current computer and chipset and proceeding and source windows and vista upgrade advisor and video controller and installing windows and hard drive and Hardware and Windows Vista Upgrade Advisor and vista and windows operating system and system memory and video card and Windows.

Windows Vista Defragmentation

Although it is virtually handicapped in terms of the options it actually provides to the user in comparison to Windows XP, the hard disk defragmentation utility in Windows Vista is an evolution of the equivalent from the predecessor operating system. But the enhancements come essentially under the hood of the tool. In this context, the actual defragmentation engine was tuned up, as well as the management of the fragmentation process.

“By default, the defrag tool only defragments files smaller than 64 megabytes (MB). Therefore, files larger than 64 MB are not moved unnecessarily. In earlier versions of Windows operating systems, if the defrag engine was in the middle of a large move request, it could take lots of time to cancel defragmentation. In Windows Vista, the defrag engine processes input and output requests in smaller portions. Therefore, you can avoid situations where the defrag engine is busy with processing large move requests when you cancel a defragmentation session”, Microsoft explained. (more…)

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Written by Jason on October 9th, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on memory management and disk defragmentation and disk defragmenter and cpu resources and defragmentation utility and minimal cpu and free space and defrag tool and processes and system memory and vista and Microsoft and Windows and Computer and computer and operating system and windows operating systems and Windows Vista.

Windows Vista Run with Zero RAM

That’s right! Windows Vista can run using a total of zero system memory. Well, bear with me, it will all make sense in the end. When it first introduced Windows Vista, Microsoft faced criticism because of the system requirements associated with the new platform. And the truth of the matter is that Vista is nothing short of a resource hog. The latest operating system from the Redmond company will eat right through CPU cycles, and will swallow every last bit of Random Access Memory you can throw at it. Vista will hesitate little to consume all the resources at its disposal in order to deliver the high-end performance level and user experience synonymous with the Wow.

The system requirements for Vista are divided according to SKU. There are the recommended minimum hardware requirements valid for Windows Vista Home Basic and Starter editions, and then the standard is raised when it comes to the Home Premium, Business, Enterprise and Ultimate SKUs. According to Microsoft, Vista can go as low as an 800-MHz 32-bit (x86) or 64-bit (x64) processor and 512 MB of RAM. But this does not mean that users cannot feed some 3.5 GB of RAM into 32-bit editions of Vista

Click to continue reading "Windows Vista Run with Zero RAM"

Written by Jason on October 6th, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on performance level and kernel memory and photoshop skills and windows task manager and zero system and cpu cycles and system memory and System Requirements and Microsoft and vista and 64 bit and Windows.

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