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| Performance and Maintainance of Windows Vista A forum for performance and maintenance tasks in Windows Vista. (microsoft.public.windows.vista.performance_maintainance) |
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Hey everyone, i was wondering, is there any way of stripping features off
vista (primarily the ones that make it pretty) to make it use less system resources? i know this was very doable in XP, i did it in fact, but im not sure how to go about it in vista. so, does anyone have experience or know of a way of doing this? because i like my OS like i like my women, skinny and fast, and right now, vista is fat... thanks in advance Jacob T (sempri_fi) |
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sempri_fi wrote:
Hey everyone, i was wondering, is there any way of stripping features off vista (primarily the ones that make it pretty) to make it use less system resources? i know this was very doable in XP, i did it in fact, but im not sure how to go about it in vista. so, does anyone have experience or know of a way of doing this? because i like my OS like i like my women, skinny and fast, and right now, vista is fat... thanks in advance Jacob T (sempri_fi) You could try VLite http://www.vlite.net/ |
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no way to do it myself?
im not much for 3rd party stuff if i can help it... "Neil Harley" wrote: sempri_fi wrote: Hey everyone, i was wondering, is there any way of stripping features off vista (primarily the ones that make it pretty) to make it use less system resources? i know this was very doable in XP, i did it in fact, but im not sure how to go about it in vista. so, does anyone have experience or know of a way of doing this? because i like my OS like i like my women, skinny and fast, and right now, vista is fat... thanks in advance Jacob T (sempri_fi) You could try VLite http://www.vlite.net/ |
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sempri_fi wrote:
no way to do it myself? im not much for 3rd party stuff if i can help it... If you want to strip off the eye candy try setting the PC for 'Best Performance' and use the Classic Theme and Start Menu. System Properties / Advanced / Performance (Settings) / check the 'Adjust for best performance' radio button. |
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On the visual themes options, untick the following:
Animate windows when minimizing and maximizing Fade or slide menus into view Fade of slide ToolTips into view Fade out menu items after clicking Slide open combo boxes Slide taskbar buttons You can also disable or set to manual, services in administrative tools but you should look up info about each one and choose what bests suits you. |
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"Gideon_CC" wrote in message
... On the visual themes options, untick the following: Animate windows when minimizing and maximizing Fade or slide menus into view Fade of slide ToolTips into view Fade out menu items after clicking Slide open combo boxes Slide taskbar buttons You can also disable or set to manual, services in administrative tools but you should look up info about each one and choose what bests suits you. If you have done this to XP before then you obviously have the skills to do it in Vista. Just Google 'Vista Performance Tips'. -- Can't think of a sig at the moment. Read this instead. |
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If you go to Control Panel - Performance, you can adjust visual effects for
best performance.. Bear in mind that many of the other processes installed are not actually using any resources unless you access them.. "sempri_fi" wrote in message ... Hey everyone, i was wondering, is there any way of stripping features off vista (primarily the ones that make it pretty) to make it use less system resources? i know this was very doable in XP, i did it in fact, but im not sure how to go about it in vista. so, does anyone have experience or know of a way of doing this? because i like my OS like i like my women, skinny and fast, and right now, vista is fat... thanks in advance Jacob T (sempri_fi) -- Mike Hall MS MVP Windows Shell/User http://msmvps.com/blogs/mikehall/ |
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ah, ok, that clears things up a bit
so, when i turn off all of the visual effects, is there going to be a noticeable difference in performance? or is it going to be pretty slight? i ask this because i cant find a suitable new laptop that doesnt run vista, and laptops are usually short on RAM as it is, so from what i read, vista eats about a gig, so that gives me like 1 gig to do everything else with, so any way i can cut that figure down will help. and its partly because i want to see just how skinny i can make it run, i'd bet fairly skinny, but im not sure, they seem to have changed an awful lot in vista versus xp or 98 (i never touched me or 2k) "Mike Hall - MVP" wrote: If you go to Control Panel - Performance, you can adjust visual effects for best performance.. Bear in mind that many of the other processes installed are not actually using any resources unless you access them.. "sempri_fi" wrote in message ... Hey everyone, i was wondering, is there any way of stripping features off vista (primarily the ones that make it pretty) to make it use less system resources? i know this was very doable in XP, i did it in fact, but im not sure how to go about it in vista. so, does anyone have experience or know of a way of doing this? because i like my OS like i like my women, skinny and fast, and right now, vista is fat... thanks in advance Jacob T (sempri_fi) -- Mike Hall MS MVP Windows Shell/User http://msmvps.com/blogs/mikehall/ |
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"sempri_fi" wrote
ah, ok, that clears things up a bit so, when i turn off all of the visual effects, is there going to be a noticeable difference in performance? or is it going to be pretty slight? i ask this because i cant find a suitable new laptop that doesnt run vista, and laptops are usually short on RAM as it is, so from what i read, vista eats about a gig, so that gives me like 1 gig to do everything else with, so any way i can cut that figure down will help. and its partly because i want to see just how skinny i can make it run, i'd bet fairly skinny, but im not sure, they seem to have changed an awful lot in vista versus xp or 98 (i never touched me or 2k) 2GB is a good amount of RAM for Vista. Don't pay any attention to how much RAM Vista uses. The memory management in Vista is different and better. It tries to find a use for all the RAM, either for what currently needs it, and to cache programs and data based on your use patterns. I don't know how much performance gain you'll see. -- Rock [MS-MVP User/Shell] |
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"Rock" wrote in message ... "sempri_fi" wrote ah, ok, that clears things up a bit so, when i turn off all of the visual effects, is there going to be a noticeable difference in performance? or is it going to be pretty slight? i ask this because i cant find a suitable new laptop that doesnt run vista, and laptops are usually short on RAM as it is, so from what i read, vista eats about a gig, so that gives me like 1 gig to do everything else with, so any way i can cut that figure down will help. and its partly because i want to see just how skinny i can make it run, i'd bet fairly skinny, but im not sure, they seem to have changed an awful lot in vista versus xp or 98 (i never touched me or 2k) 2GB is a good amount of RAM for Vista. Don't pay any attention to how much RAM Vista uses. The memory management in Vista is different and better. It tries to find a use for all the RAM, either for what currently needs it, and to cache programs and data based on your use patterns. I don't know how much performance gain you'll see. -- Rock [MS-MVP User/Shell] That is an excellent point. From reading the PC enthusiasts boards I have always wondered why people think it is a good deal to have a high percentage of their available memory unused. Perhaps they think it is the equivalent of having more than half a tank of gas in their vehicle. |
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