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Hardware and Windows Vista Hardware issues in relation to Windows Vista. (microsoft.public.windows.vista.hardware_devices) |
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Ready Boost missing in action?
Hi,
I'm installed Vista on my laptop (no driver for the smart battery, so Vista does not recognize it as a mobile PC). Anyway, I found out that after several times of hibernate and suspend, Ready Boost will suddenly stop working. When this happens, the Property box of the drive, the Ready Boost tab will be missing. Attempting to stop the Ready Boost service will make Ready Boost to be in "stopping" condition infinitely. The only way to solve this is to restart Vista. Any idea? |
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Ready Boost missing in action?
"Programatix" wrote in message ... Hi, I'm installed Vista on my laptop (no driver for the smart battery, so Vista does not recognize it as a mobile PC). Anyway, I found out that after several times of hibernate and suspend, Ready Boost will suddenly stop working. When this happens, the Property box of the drive, the Ready Boost tab will be missing. Attempting to stop the Ready Boost service will make Ready Boost to be in "stopping" condition infinitely. The only way to solve this is to restart Vista. Any idea? I have seen the same behavior after Vista recovers from Sleep. It's not all the time, but enough to be aggravating. I really don't need ReadyBoost, I have 2GB RAM. But, I do find it helps a bit when I'm running a virtual machine. Typically, if you have over 1GB RAM, you will not notice any performance increase using ReadyBoost. The easiest way I've found to get ReadyBoost working again- right click your device and format it- either FAT or FAT32. After the format, you may have to click "Test Again" a couple of times. Take care, Michael |
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Ready Boost missing in action?
Well, the Ready Boost tab is missing... so can't really click the Test
button anyway. Sigh... anyway, I have 1.2GB of RAM. "MICHAEL" wrote in message ... "Programatix" wrote in message ... Hi, I'm installed Vista on my laptop (no driver for the smart battery, so Vista does not recognize it as a mobile PC). Anyway, I found out that after several times of hibernate and suspend, Ready Boost will suddenly stop working. When this happens, the Property box of the drive, the Ready Boost tab will be missing. Attempting to stop the Ready Boost service will make Ready Boost to be in "stopping" condition infinitely. The only way to solve this is to restart Vista. Any idea? I have seen the same behavior after Vista recovers from Sleep. It's not all the time, but enough to be aggravating. I really don't need ReadyBoost, I have 2GB RAM. But, I do find it helps a bit when I'm running a virtual machine. Typically, if you have over 1GB RAM, you will not notice any performance increase using ReadyBoost. The easiest way I've found to get ReadyBoost working again- right click your device and format it- either FAT or FAT32. After the format, you may have to click "Test Again" a couple of times. Take care, Michael |
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Ready Boost missing in action?
"MICHAEL" :
The easiest way I've found to get ReadyBoost working again- right click your device and format it- either FAT or FAT32. After the format, you may have to click "Test Again" a couple of times. Why FAT or FAT32? I formatted mine with NTFS and it is working fine. |
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Ready Boost missing in action?
"Ken Gardner" wrote in message ... "MICHAEL" : The easiest way I've found to get ReadyBoost working again- right click your device and format it- either FAT or FAT32. After the format, you may have to click "Test Again" a couple of times. Why FAT or FAT32? I formatted mine with NTFS and it is working fine. Typically, on USB flash drives, FAT is the default format. On small drives, many say that FAT is a bit faster than NTFS. If it is working for you, don't "fix" it. :-) -Michael |
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Ready Boost missing in action?
Did you restart the ReadyBoost service?
Pull the drive out and stick it back in. I'll leave my general copy and paste reply below, for a little more info. ------------------------------------------------ ReadyBoost can be a tricky thing to get working on some flash drives, and a lot of flash drives just aren't fast enough for ReadyBoost. Try this first; Go into Device ManagerDisk Drives Find your flash drive. Double click it. Policies tab. Make sure "Optimize for performance" is checked. Test again. Sometimes even formatting the drive can do the trick. Either FAT or FAT32. Make sure it's not plugged into a USB hub. Or, try plugging it into another slot. ReadyBoost - Using Your USB Key to Speed Up Windows Vista http://blogs.msdn.com/tomarcher/arch...14/576548.aspx "Programatix" wrote in message ... Well, the Ready Boost tab is missing... so can't really click the Test button anyway. Sigh... anyway, I have 1.2GB of RAM. "MICHAEL" wrote in message ... "Programatix" wrote in message ... Hi, I'm installed Vista on my laptop (no driver for the smart battery, so Vista does not recognize it as a mobile PC). Anyway, I found out that after several times of hibernate and suspend, Ready Boost will suddenly stop working. When this happens, the Property box of the drive, the Ready Boost tab will be missing. Attempting to stop the Ready Boost service will make Ready Boost to be in "stopping" condition infinitely. The only way to solve this is to restart Vista. Any idea? I have seen the same behavior after Vista recovers from Sleep. It's not all the time, but enough to be aggravating. I really don't need ReadyBoost, I have 2GB RAM. But, I do find it helps a bit when I'm running a virtual machine. Typically, if you have over 1GB RAM, you will not notice any performance increase using ReadyBoost. The easiest way I've found to get ReadyBoost working again- right click your device and format it- either FAT or FAT32. After the format, you may have to click "Test Again" a couple of times. Take care, Michael |
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Ready Boost missing in action?
Well, as I said in the first post, stopping the service will put it in the
infinite stopping condition. By the way, this does not happen to my other machine. "MICHAEL" wrote in message ... Did you restart the ReadyBoost service? Pull the drive out and stick it back in. I'll leave my general copy and paste reply below, for a little more info. ------------------------------------------------ ReadyBoost can be a tricky thing to get working on some flash drives, and a lot of flash drives just aren't fast enough for ReadyBoost. Try this first; Go into Device ManagerDisk Drives Find your flash drive. Double click it. Policies tab. Make sure "Optimize for performance" is checked. Test again. Sometimes even formatting the drive can do the trick. Either FAT or FAT32. Make sure it's not plugged into a USB hub. Or, try plugging it into another slot. ReadyBoost - Using Your USB Key to Speed Up Windows Vista http://blogs.msdn.com/tomarcher/arch...14/576548.aspx "Programatix" wrote in message ... Well, the Ready Boost tab is missing... so can't really click the Test button anyway. Sigh... anyway, I have 1.2GB of RAM. "MICHAEL" wrote in message ... "Programatix" wrote in message ... Hi, I'm installed Vista on my laptop (no driver for the smart battery, so Vista does not recognize it as a mobile PC). Anyway, I found out that after several times of hibernate and suspend, Ready Boost will suddenly stop working. When this happens, the Property box of the drive, the Ready Boost tab will be missing. Attempting to stop the Ready Boost service will make Ready Boost to be in "stopping" condition infinitely. The only way to solve this is to restart Vista. Any idea? I have seen the same behavior after Vista recovers from Sleep. It's not all the time, but enough to be aggravating. I really don't need ReadyBoost, I have 2GB RAM. But, I do find it helps a bit when I'm running a virtual machine. Typically, if you have over 1GB RAM, you will not notice any performance increase using ReadyBoost. The easiest way I've found to get ReadyBoost working again- right click your device and format it- either FAT or FAT32. After the format, you may have to click "Test Again" a couple of times. Take care, Michael |
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Ready Boost missing in action?
Okay- I didn't say anything about stopping the service.
I'll take your statement to mean it is still trying to stop the service- it's hung/frozen. You need to reboot. Make sure the ReadyBoost service is on Automatic. Restart your computer. Now try some of the suggestions again. -Michael "Programatix" wrote in message ... Well, as I said in the first post, stopping the service will put it in the infinite stopping condition. By the way, this does not happen to my other machine. "MICHAEL" wrote in message ... Did you restart the ReadyBoost service? Pull the drive out and stick it back in. I'll leave my general copy and paste reply below, for a little more info. ------------------------------------------------ ReadyBoost can be a tricky thing to get working on some flash drives, and a lot of flash drives just aren't fast enough for ReadyBoost. Try this first; Go into Device ManagerDisk Drives Find your flash drive. Double click it. Policies tab. Make sure "Optimize for performance" is checked. Test again. Sometimes even formatting the drive can do the trick. Either FAT or FAT32. Make sure it's not plugged into a USB hub. Or, try plugging it into another slot. ReadyBoost - Using Your USB Key to Speed Up Windows Vista http://blogs.msdn.com/tomarcher/arch...14/576548.aspx "Programatix" wrote in message ... Well, the Ready Boost tab is missing... so can't really click the Test button anyway. Sigh... anyway, I have 1.2GB of RAM. "MICHAEL" wrote in message ... "Programatix" wrote in message ... Hi, I'm installed Vista on my laptop (no driver for the smart battery, so Vista does not recognize it as a mobile PC). Anyway, I found out that after several times of hibernate and suspend, Ready Boost will suddenly stop working. When this happens, the Property box of the drive, the Ready Boost tab will be missing. Attempting to stop the Ready Boost service will make Ready Boost to be in "stopping" condition infinitely. The only way to solve this is to restart Vista. Any idea? I have seen the same behavior after Vista recovers from Sleep. It's not all the time, but enough to be aggravating. I really don't need ReadyBoost, I have 2GB RAM. But, I do find it helps a bit when I'm running a virtual machine. Typically, if you have over 1GB RAM, you will not notice any performance increase using ReadyBoost. The easiest way I've found to get ReadyBoost working again- right click your device and format it- either FAT or FAT32. After the format, you may have to click "Test Again" a couple of times. Take care, Michael |
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Ready Boost missing in action?
"MICHAEL" wrote in message ... "Ken Gardner" wrote in message ... "MICHAEL" : The easiest way I've found to get ReadyBoost working again- right click your device and format it- either FAT or FAT32. After the format, you may have to click "Test Again" a couple of times. Why FAT or FAT32? I formatted mine with NTFS and it is working fine. Typically, on USB flash drives, FAT is the default format. On small drives, many say that FAT is a bit faster than NTFS. If it is working for you, don't "fix" it. :-) -Michael What do you think about the amount or ram that Windows Vista recommends for ReadyBoost? I plugged in a 1gb flash drive and "Windows recommends using 880mgs for optimal performance." Why not use the whole stick? And by the way, where is the "test" option? I don't see it on the ReadyBoost properties tab. |
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Ready Boost missing in action?
"Victek" wrote in message ... "MICHAEL" wrote in message ... "Ken Gardner" wrote in message ... "MICHAEL" : The easiest way I've found to get ReadyBoost working again- right click your device and format it- either FAT or FAT32. After the format, you may have to click "Test Again" a couple of times. Why FAT or FAT32? I formatted mine with NTFS and it is working fine. Typically, on USB flash drives, FAT is the default format. On small drives, many say that FAT is a bit faster than NTFS. If it is working for you, don't "fix" it. :-) -Michael What do you think about the amount or ram that Windows Vista recommends for ReadyBoost? I'm not exactly sure what you mean. ReadyBoost is not RAM. If you have over 1GB of RAM, you will not see much of an increase in performance using ReadyBoost. I plugged in a 1gb flash drive and "Windows recommends using 880mgs for optimal performance." Why not use the whole stick? And by the way, where is the "test" option? I don't see it on the ReadyBoost properties tab. The recommendation is just that. You can use the slider to adjust it so that it uses more. That recommendation is basically saying, use at least 880MB for optimal performance. But, you can use more. If your device is already being used for ReadyBoost, the "Test Again" will not be there. -Michael |
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