Windows 7 Discussion on Windows 7 and operating it on the Dell Mini series.

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MoInSTL MoInSTL is offline
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Default Re: Windows 7 - Ultimate SSD Speed Tweaks - 03-18-2009, 03:41 AM

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Originally Posted by WolfKeeper
Personally, I haven't noticed any issues, but then, I'm running it on a Mini 9: I don't need or use libraries or the Media Center.
That was my point WolfKeeper.


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mr.c mr.c is offline
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Default Re: Windows 7 - Ultimate SSD Speed Tweaks - 04-10-2009, 10:50 PM

To the Windows team rep:

The focus of this tweak was on how to correct some OS issues related to using the new SSD's.

What would you do to optimize a fully loaded Vista install to keep from destroying the very expensive device? Has Microsoft given it any though?

I don't use Indexing either and haven't had any problems with my standard Windows installation on a standard hard drive but If I were to buy the SSD and didn't want it toasted because Windows must have Indexing to operate then I suspect I'll just have to adjust accordingly.

Good grief!
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WolfKeeper WolfKeeper is offline
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Default Re: Windows 7 - Ultimate SSD Speed Tweaks - 04-10-2009, 11:57 PM

Ironically, I've left everything on after installing build 7068. I haven't noticed any speed issues.


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mystyang mystyang is offline
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Exclamation SuperFetch & AHCI vs ATA/IDE/RAID - 06-07-2009, 01:11 AM

I just got my Samsung PB22J, 256GB MFC SSD earlier this week. I've been playing with it for days, slowly empoying the tips in tricks found here and in other forums.

I just read about turning off AHCI and switching to regular ATA/IDE/RAID mode instead. I just did that now and I've noticed a TREMENDOUS speed boost at startup. no flicker, what so ever, and I've been able to start programs right off the bat instead of waiting for weird and crappy pauses, at times.

I've also read a ton of opinions regarding SuperFetch and, I have to say, it's bollocks. RAM may be faster than SSDs, but the notion of turning on disk caching of any kind is an antiquated concept. it was originally conceived to alleviate the BS of having low-doses and poor speed of ram. It may have been an ally for a VERY long time, but with the emergence of SSDs and greater ram sizes and speed (while maintaining a very low cost), it MUST go. all of it.

I've turned off SuperFetch/Prefetching altogether and I am FLYING. I've also stopped using AHCI

I own a Dell XPS M1530 /w 4GB ram running Windows Vista x86

thanks for your assistance in helping me achieve max performance on my SSD
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strider_mt2k strider_mt2k is offline
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Default 08-19-2009, 04:21 PM

After running a while with indexing turned off I've very recently turned it back on again.
I like keeping the thumbnails on my media files without it having to re-read them all the time.

The visual slickness doesn't seem to affect performance really either, or not in a way I notice in regular usage.


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jimhanseng jimhanseng is offline
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Default 09-19-2009, 11:21 PM

Quote:
Originally Posted by cmarcho View Post
Also, I would only suggest disabling Hibernation for systems that don't have the drive space available. Hibernation is a great feature. Booting the OS every time is just a big waste of time. You should be sleeping or hibernating rather than doing a complete shut down every time you are done with the computer.
A word of note... Hibernation is nice, but it can cause corruption to your system. If you do any installs or updated, it is best to reboot before you go into hibernation. Shutdown updates many files that are not updated during hibernation. Hibernation just saves the current state. As many of you have experianced, coming back from hibernation does not always come back 100%.

Doing ONLY hibernation is asking for a corrupted system.
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holmes4 holmes4 is offline
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Default 09-19-2009, 11:43 PM

I have been using hibernation for years - never a problem. I have not seen anyone, other than you, claim that hibernation corrupts systems.


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nd4spdbh nd4spdbh is offline
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Default 09-20-2009, 05:52 AM

i must ask why hasnt anyone said anything about algining the partition you install win 7 on.... depending on how you let win 7 install make your partitions it may or may not align it... regardless you should align it to 64KB for best performance.

OCZ Forum - View Single Post - How to setup Core V1/2, Solid, Apex, Vertex SSD with aligned partitions using USB (if available on the drive) or SATA. Updated to show how to use Vista recovery disk

Do the same steps using the win 7 install... offset by 64KB, and dont let win 7 do n e formatting of ur ssd, just install it on the ntfs partition.

Probably one of the best speed tweaks out there!
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Montala Montala is offline
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Default 09-20-2009, 09:49 AM

Quote:
Originally Posted by nd4spdbh View Post
i must ask why hasnt anyone said anything about algining the partition you install win 7 on.... depending on how you let win 7 install make your partitions it may or may not align it... regardless you should align it to 64KB for best performance.
Sorry for being a bit thick, but I don't quite understand why you should have to 'align' a system partition, or indeed what you are actually alighning it with?

Unless of course we are talking about an SSD which is going to be set up with a 'dual-boot' option... but if not, I am sure that someone will explain further!


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MoInSTL MoInSTL is offline
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Default 09-20-2009, 12:47 PM

It's done for performance. Did you read the link in nd4spdbh's post right above yours?


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