Welcome to Vista Banter. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions, articles and access our other FREE features. By joining our free community you will have access to ask questions and reply to others posts, upload your own photos and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact support. |
|
Hardware and Windows Vista Hardware issues in relation to Windows Vista. (microsoft.public.windows.vista.hardware_devices) |
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
|||
ReadyBoost Question
Hi there. I searched generally about this before posting but with no luck. I have a new system with the new Core i7 920 CPU (don't know if this matters ) and with 6 GB DDR3 RAM (1333Mhz 6x1BG) running Vista Business SP1 x64. I intend to disable the pagefile completely and to use a dedicated USB Flash Drive for ReadyBoost. - What size should this USB Flash Drive have? -I read somewhere that it should be a 2.5:1 ratio (in my case 15GB then) for high-end systems. Is that right? - - Do I have to configure the device on every Windows Boot again, so ReadyBoost is going to use it? Thank you for taking the time to read it. -Any answer will be appreciated and suggestions/advices if I should or not do this as well. - .jimmy -- jimSON |
|
|||
ReadyBoost Question
On Sun, 1 Feb 2009 08:23:25 -0600, jimSON
wrote: Hi there. I searched generally about this before posting but with no luck. I have a new system with the new Core i7 920 CPU (don't know if this matters ) and with 6 GB DDR3 RAM (1333Mhz 6x1BG) running Vista Business SP1 x64. I intend to disable the pagefile completely and to use a dedicated USB Flash Drive for ReadyBoost. 1) Not a good idea. Some programs will be looking for a pagefile. 2) Googling SHOULD have found you plenty of hits showing that Readyboost is of no value on systems with 2G of RAM or more. - What size should this USB Flash Drive have? -I read somewhere that it should be a 2.5:1 ratio (in my case 15GB then) for high-end systems. Is that right? - - Do I have to configure the device on every Windows Boot again, so ReadyBoost is going to use it? Thank you for taking the time to read it. -Any answer will be appreciated and suggestions/advices if I should or not do this as well. - .jimmy |
|
|||
ReadyBoost Question
Jake Marley;955646 Wrote: On Sun, 1 Feb 2009 08:23:25 -0600, jimSON wrote: Hi there. I searched generally about this before posting but with no luck. I have a new system with the new Core i7 920 CPU (don't know if this matters ) and with 6 GB DDR3 RAM (1333Mhz 6x1BG) running Vista Business SP1 x64. I intend to disable the pagefile completely and to use a dedicated USB Flash Drive for ReadyBoost. 1) Not a good idea. Some programs will be looking for a pagefile. 2) Googling SHOULD have found you plenty of hits showing that Readyboost is of no value on systems with 2G of RAM or more. - What size should this USB Flash Drive have? -I read somewhere that it should be a 2.5:1 ratio (in my case 15GB then) for high-end systems. Is that right? - - Do I have to configure the device on every Windows Boot again, so ReadyBoost is going to use it? Thank you for taking the time to read it. -Any answer will be appreciated and suggestions/advices if I should or not do this as well. - .jimmy I probably didn't search thoroughly or good enough. More or less ReadyBoost is useless for me then. I'll try to google it again for what it's worth. But what about putting the -pagefile -(if really needed by some apps) in a exeternal fast USB Flash Drive? Would that work or be of any use? Would I gain anything from that considering the R/W times of the USB FD would be better than the HDD's. -- jimSON |
|
|||
ReadyBoost Question
Why do you want to
1. Deteriorate the performance of your system? 2. Cripple programs that demand that a pagefile be present? -- Richard Urban Microsoft MVP Windows Desktop Experience "jimSON" wrote in message ... Hi there. I searched generally about this before posting but with no luck. I have a new system with the new Core i7 920 CPU (don't know if this matters ) and with 6 GB DDR3 RAM (1333Mhz 6x1BG) running Vista Business SP1 x64. I intend to disable the pagefile completely and to use a dedicated USB Flash Drive for ReadyBoost. - What size should this USB Flash Drive have? -I read somewhere that it should be a 2.5:1 ratio (in my case 15GB then) for high-end systems. Is that right? - - Do I have to configure the device on every Windows Boot again, so ReadyBoost is going to use it? Thank you for taking the time to read it. -Any answer will be appreciated and suggestions/advices if I should or not do this as well. - jimmy -- jimSON |
|
|||
ReadyBoost Question
Well, I'm just looking around for ways to get rid or move the pagefile since it isn't getting used much or not at all in my system. I can see that this step could deteriorate the system performance, but would it still cripple programs if the pagefile would be present on a external flash drive ? Richard Urban;955683 Wrote: Why do you want to 1. Deteriorate the performance of your system? 2. Cripple programs that demand that a pagefile be present? -- Richard Urban Microsoft MVP Windows Desktop Experience "jimSON" wrote in message ... Hi there. I searched generally about this before posting but with no luck. I have a new system with the new Core i7 920 CPU (don't know if this matters ) and with 6 GB DDR3 RAM (1333Mhz 6x1BG) running Vista Business SP1 x64. I intend to disable the pagefile completely and to use a dedicated USB Flash Drive for ReadyBoost. - What size should this USB Flash Drive have? -I read somewhere that it should be a 2.5:1 ratio (in my case 15GB then) for high-end systems. Is that right? - - Do I have to configure the device on every Windows Boot again, so ReadyBoost is going to use it? Thank you for taking the time to read it. -Any answer will be appreciated and suggestions/advices if I should or not do this as well. - jimmy -- jimSON -- jimSON |
|
|||
ReadyBoost Question
Leave your page file alone and use Readyboost if you want. I got a 4Gig flash drive running Readyboost. Whether or not its helping...who knows? Unless you got a 20gig HD forget about your pagefile. You system will use the HD space if its needed on its own. With that system you are pestering over nothing. -- joel406 |
|
|||
ReadyBoost Question
joel406;955699 Wrote: Leave your page file alone and use Readyboost if you want. I got a 4Gig flash drive running Readyboost. Whether or not its helping...who knows? Unless you got a 20gig HD forget about your pagefile. You system will use the HD space if its needed on its own. With that system you are pestering over nothing. I probably will do that considering the responses I got here, but reduce the size (or at least the max size of the pf) to a small number. -- jimSON |
|
|||
ReadyBoost Question
Absolutely! The pagefile is best on the partition where the operating system
resides. A hard drive is faster than a USB device. If you have another hard drive, on a **different** drive controller (remember that there are 2 IDE drives per controller) you can place a large pagefile on the other drive and keep a smaller pagefile on the system partition. You will see that pagefile usage will be spread out between the two. -- Richard Urban Microsoft MVP Windows Desktop Experience "jimSON" wrote in message ... Well, I'm just looking around for ways to get rid or move the pagefile since it isn't getting used much or not at all in my system. I can see that this step could deteriorate the system performance, but would it still cripple programs if the pagefile would be present on a external flash drive ? Richard Urban;955683 Wrote: Why do you want to 1. Deteriorate the performance of your system? 2. Cripple programs that demand that a pagefile be present? -- Richard Urban Microsoft MVP Windows Desktop Experience "jimSON" wrote in message ... Hi there. I searched generally about this before posting but with no luck. I have a new system with the new Core i7 920 CPU (don't know if this matters ) and with 6 GB DDR3 RAM (1333Mhz 6x1BG) running Vista Business SP1 x64. I intend to disable the pagefile completely and to use a dedicated USB Flash Drive for ReadyBoost. - What size should this USB Flash Drive have? -I read somewhere that it should be a 2.5:1 ratio (in my case 15GB then) for high-end systems. Is that right? - - Do I have to configure the device on every Windows Boot again, so ReadyBoost is going to use it? Thank you for taking the time to read it. -Any answer will be appreciated and suggestions/advices if I should or not do this as well. - jimmy -- jimSON -- jimSON |
|
|||
ReadyBoost Question
OK, thank you for making that clear to me. I only have 1 HDD and it's on a SATA Controller, so placing the pagefile anywhere else is out of the question. Richard Urban;955708 Wrote: Absolutely! The pagefile is best on the partition where the operating system resides. A hard drive is faster than a USB device. If you have another hard drive, on a **different** drive controller (remember that there are 2 IDE drives per controller) you can place a large pagefile on the other drive and keep a smaller pagefile on the system partition. You will see that pagefile usage will be spread out between the two. -- Richard Urban Microsoft MVP Windows Desktop Experience "jimSON" wrote in message ... Well, I'm just looking around for ways to get rid or move the pagefile since it isn't getting used much or not at all in my system. I can see that this step could deteriorate the system performance, but would it still cripple programs if the pagefile would be present on a external flash drive ? Richard Urban;955683 Wrote: Why do you want to 1. Deteriorate the performance of your system? 2. Cripple programs that demand that a pagefile be present? -- Richard Urban Microsoft MVP Windows Desktop Experience "jimSON" wrote in message ... -- jimSON -- jimSON |
|
|||
ReadyBoost Question
You will see no benefit in your situation. Leave it where it is.
-- Richard Urban Microsoft MVP Windows Desktop Experience "jimSON" wrote in message ... OK, thank you for making that clear to me. I only have 1 HDD and it's on a SATA Controller, so placing the pagefile anywhere else is out of the question. Richard Urban;955708 Wrote: Absolutely! The pagefile is best on the partition where the operating system resides. A hard drive is faster than a USB device. If you have another hard drive, on a **different** drive controller (remember that there are 2 IDE drives per controller) you can place a large pagefile on the other drive and keep a smaller pagefile on the system partition. You will see that pagefile usage will be spread out between the two. -- Richard Urban Microsoft MVP Windows Desktop Experience "jimSON" wrote in message ... Well, I'm just looking around for ways to get rid or move the pagefile since it isn't getting used much or not at all in my system. I can see that this step could deteriorate the system performance, but would it still cripple programs if the pagefile would be present on a external flash drive ? Richard Urban;955683 Wrote: Why do you want to 1. Deteriorate the performance of your system? 2. Cripple programs that demand that a pagefile be present? -- Richard Urban Microsoft MVP Windows Desktop Experience "jimSON" wrote in message ... -- jimSON -- jimSON |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|