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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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I have just puchased my first Windows Vista computer - an HP laptop. I have
purchased at leat five laptops since 2000 so I am familiar with setup and comfortable with installations etc. I have three questions here. 1. My last computer had Windows XP and an 80 gb hard drive with 70 gb full - After copying the data only (55 GB) to my new 250 gb hard drive I have only 107 GB remaining of the 222 GB C drive partition. I have not yet added many programs. That tells me that Vista must be using 50-60 GB or more of the drive. Can that be correct? 2. My new computer takes 5-6 minutes to start up. After two minutes I get the welcome screen. Then the monitor goes black for a full two minutes before continuing the startup process. Is this normal for Vista? 3. Occasionally the monitor goes dark for a few seconds and a window pops up saying the display driver has failed but is back. Is this normal? I certainly gained no speed with this new computer. There are many things I like about Vista. Since I have no previous experience with owning it I am trying to sort out if this computer is a lemon that should be returned or if I should just put up with the downside. Any help would be appreciated. |
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Vista does not take 50 to 60 GB of space...but the added programs that HP
put on it might. Then there is the Hibernation File..The Space reserved for system recovery...the page file.... Check to see what goodies and free trial software HP was nice enough to push onto your HD...and get rid of it That is a long start up time and as such you will need to check what exactly is starting in the same way as you would check when you had XP...Start/Run/Msconfig....as well as Task Manger.Anything you feel you don’t need to start ...find the path and stop it.Anything your not sure about do a Google on the name. Maybe your Anti Virus is set to run every time you start?? I would go to the HP website and look for an updated Vista display driver...or at least reinstall the present one. Good Luck with your new purchase of Vista peter -- DISCLAIMER: If you find a posting or message from me offensive, inappropriate, or disruptive, please ignore it. If you don't know how to ignore a posting, complain to me and I will be only too happy to demonstrate... ;-) "grsode" wrote in message ... I have just puchased my first Windows Vista computer - an HP laptop. I have purchased at leat five laptops since 2000 so I am familiar with setup and comfortable with installations etc. I have three questions here. 1. My last computer had Windows XP and an 80 gb hard drive with 70 gb full - After copying the data only (55 GB) to my new 250 gb hard drive I have only 107 GB remaining of the 222 GB C drive partition. I have not yet added many programs. That tells me that Vista must be using 50-60 GB or more of the drive. Can that be correct? 2. My new computer takes 5-6 minutes to start up. After two minutes I get the welcome screen. Then the monitor goes black for a full two minutes before continuing the startup process. Is this normal for Vista? 3. Occasionally the monitor goes dark for a few seconds and a window pops up saying the display driver has failed but is back. Is this normal? I certainly gained no speed with this new computer. There are many things I like about Vista. Since I have no previous experience with owning it I am trying to sort out if this computer is a lemon that should be returned or if I should just put up with the downside. Any help would be appreciated. |
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grsode wrote:
I have just puchased my first Windows Vista computer - an HP laptop. I have purchased at leat five laptops since 2000 so I am familiar with setup and comfortable with installations etc. I have three questions here. 1. My last computer had Windows XP and an 80 gb hard drive with 70 gb full - After copying the data only (55 GB) to my new 250 gb hard drive I have only 107 GB remaining of the 222 GB C drive partition. I have not yet added many programs. That tells me that Vista must be using 50-60 GB or more of the drive. Can that be correct? 2. My new computer takes 5-6 minutes to start up. After two minutes I get the welcome screen. Then the monitor goes black for a full two minutes before continuing the startup process. Is this normal for Vista? 3. Occasionally the monitor goes dark for a few seconds and a window pops up saying the display driver has failed but is back. Is this normal? I certainly gained no speed with this new computer. There are many things I like about Vista. Since I have no previous experience with owning it I am trying to sort out if this computer is a lemon that should be returned or if I should just put up with the downside. Any help would be appreciated. If you have "HP Total Care Advisor" starting at boot-up, disable it. I collects a lot of information together that you don't need and takes a long time to load. -- Dave T. "Many people die at twenty-five and aren't buried until they are seventy-five". Benjamin Franklin |
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I have just puchased my first Windows Vista computer - an HP laptop. I
have purchased at leat five laptops since 2000 so I am familiar with setup and comfortable with installations etc. I have three questions here. 1. My last computer had Windows XP and an 80 gb hard drive with 70 gb full - After copying the data only (55 GB) to my new 250 gb hard drive I have only 107 GB remaining of the 222 GB C drive partition. I have not yet added many programs. That tells me that Vista must be using 50-60 GB or more of the drive. Can that be correct? 2. My new computer takes 5-6 minutes to start up. After two minutes I get the welcome screen. Then the monitor goes black for a full two minutes before continuing the startup process. Is this normal for Vista? 3. Occasionally the monitor goes dark for a few seconds and a window pops up saying the display driver has failed but is back. Is this normal? I certainly gained no speed with this new computer. There are many things I like about Vista. Since I have no previous experience with owning it I am trying to sort out if this computer is a lemon that should be returned or if I should just put up with the downside. Any help would be appreciated. As others have said you need to have a look at the Auto Startup items and cull them. Regarding the display driver failure, try checking the Windows update site for a new display driver. You may also be able to download a newer driver from the manufacturer's web site. Check to see which video adapter you have (look in the device manager) then check nvidia.com or ati.com, etc. Regarding the disk space issue, be aware that Vista uses a lot of disk space for it's System Restore and Shadow Copy feature. Unfortunately, there doesn't appear to be a way to limit it as there is in XP, however you can delete all the old System Restore points to recover disk space - there's a button to do this on the "other options" tab in "disk cleanup". Last, check the size of the internet explorer cache. By default this is ridiculously large (multiple gigs). I keep mine set to 100 megs. Hope this helps. |
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Since it is a laptop do not install display drivers from the display chip
manufacturers website or from WinUpdate only install the latest drivers from the Laptop Manufacturers Website since laptop manufacturers normally modify the display driver sauce code they get from the from the chip manufacturers in order to work better with their custom designed motherboards. "Victek" wrote in message ... I have just puchased my first Windows Vista computer - an HP laptop. I have purchased at leat five laptops since 2000 so I am familiar with setup and comfortable with installations etc. I have three questions here. 1. My last computer had Windows XP and an 80 gb hard drive with 70 gb full - After copying the data only (55 GB) to my new 250 gb hard drive I have only 107 GB remaining of the 222 GB C drive partition. I have not yet added many programs. That tells me that Vista must be using 50-60 GB or more of the drive. Can that be correct? 2. My new computer takes 5-6 minutes to start up. After two minutes I get the welcome screen. Then the monitor goes black for a full two minutes before continuing the startup process. Is this normal for Vista? 3. Occasionally the monitor goes dark for a few seconds and a window pops up saying the display driver has failed but is back. Is this normal? I certainly gained no speed with this new computer. There are many things I like about Vista. Since I have no previous experience with owning it I am trying to sort out if this computer is a lemon that should be returned or if I should just put up with the downside. Any help would be appreciated. As others have said you need to have a look at the Auto Startup items and cull them. Regarding the display driver failure, try checking the Windows update site for a new display driver. You may also be able to download a newer driver from the manufacturer's web site. Check to see which video adapter you have (look in the device manager) then check nvidia.com or ati.com, etc. Regarding the disk space issue, be aware that Vista uses a lot of disk space for it's System Restore and Shadow Copy feature. Unfortunately, there doesn't appear to be a way to limit it as there is in XP, however you can delete all the old System Restore points to recover disk space - there's a button to do this on the "other options" tab in "disk cleanup". Last, check the size of the internet explorer cache. By default this is ridiculously large (multiple gigs). I keep mine set to 100 megs. Hope this helps. |
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Thanks to all of you for your help. It has given me some good info with
which to make my decision! "grsode" wrote: I have just puchased my first Windows Vista computer - an HP laptop. I have purchased at leat five laptops since 2000 so I am familiar with setup and comfortable with installations etc. I have three questions here. 1. My last computer had Windows XP and an 80 gb hard drive with 70 gb full - After copying the data only (55 GB) to my new 250 gb hard drive I have only 107 GB remaining of the 222 GB C drive partition. I have not yet added many programs. That tells me that Vista must be using 50-60 GB or more of the drive. Can that be correct? 2. My new computer takes 5-6 minutes to start up. After two minutes I get the welcome screen. Then the monitor goes black for a full two minutes before continuing the startup process. Is this normal for Vista? 3. Occasionally the monitor goes dark for a few seconds and a window pops up saying the display driver has failed but is back. Is this normal? I certainly gained no speed with this new computer. There are many things I like about Vista. Since I have no previous experience with owning it I am trying to sort out if this computer is a lemon that should be returned or if I should just put up with the downside. Any help would be appreciated. |
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"Victek" wrote: I have just puchased my first Windows Vista computer - an HP laptop. I have purchased at leat five laptops since 2000 so I am familiar with setup and comfortable with installations etc. I have three questions here. 1. My last computer had Windows XP and an 80 gb hard drive with 70 gb full - After copying the data only (55 GB) to my new 250 gb hard drive I have only 107 GB remaining of the 222 GB C drive partition. I have not yet added many programs. That tells me that Vista must be using 50-60 GB or more of the drive. Can that be correct? 2. My new computer takes 5-6 minutes to start up. After two minutes I get the welcome screen. Then the monitor goes black for a full two minutes before continuing the startup process. Is this normal for Vista? 3. Occasionally the monitor goes dark for a few seconds and a window pops up saying the display driver has failed but is back. Is this normal? I certainly gained no speed with this new computer. There are many things I like about Vista. Since I have no previous experience with owning it I am trying to sort out if this computer is a lemon that should be returned or if I should just put up with the downside. Any help would be appreciated. As others have said you need to have a look at the Auto Startup items and cull them. Regarding the display driver failure, try checking the Windows update site for a new display driver. You may also be able to download a newer driver from the manufacturer's web site. Check to see which video adapter you have (look in the device manager) then check nvidia.com or ati.com, etc. Regarding the disk space issue, be aware that Vista uses a lot of disk space for it's System Restore and Shadow Copy feature. Unfortunately, there doesn't appear to be a way to limit it as there is in XP, however you can delete all the old System Restore points to recover disk space - there's a button to do this on the "other options" tab in "disk cleanup". Last, check the size of the internet explorer cache. By default this is ridiculously large (multiple gigs). I keep mine set to 100 megs. Hope this helps. Victek, how do you change the size of the internet explorer cache? I have not been able to find out how to do that. I do not have speed issues on start-up. Rather, I am having problems downloading streaming video. It seems like video downloads have to buffer more often now, to the point that I can hardly watch them. I have 2 Gig of RAM memory. When I look at my Resource Monitor in Vista, I am using about 1 Gig. The cached memory is around 1.4 Gig. Free memory is near nothing. It is usually about 15 Meg and it drops to zero. It looks like my hard drive is pretty active and I may be accessing virtual memory while downloading videos. I think that I should try reducing the size of the cache memory. I have tried cleaning cache memory and that doesn't seem to make any difference. I found out how to modify the amount of virtual memory, but not the cache memory. Thanks. |
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Victek, how do you change the size of the internet explorer cache? I have
not been able to find out how to do that. I do not have speed issues on start-up. Rather, I am having problems downloading streaming video. It seems like video downloads have to buffer more often now, to the point that I can hardly watch them. I have 2 Gig of RAM memory. When I look at my Resource Monitor in Vista, I am using about 1 Gig. The cached memory is around 1.4 Gig. Free memory is near nothing. It is usually about 15 Meg and it drops to zero. It looks like my hard drive is pretty active and I may be accessing virtual memory while downloading videos. I think that I should try reducing the size of the cache memory. I have tried cleaning cache memory and that doesn't seem to make any difference. I found out how to modify the amount of virtual memory, but not the cache memory. Thanks. Assuming you're using IE, open the control panel and then open internet options. On the General Tab in the middle where it says Browsing History click on the settings button - there you will be able to set the maximum space IE should use to cache its' data. You could also try defragging your hard drive to see if it improves video playback. |
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"Victek" wrote: Victek, how do you change the size of the internet explorer cache? I have not been able to find out how to do that. I do not have speed issues on start-up. Rather, I am having problems downloading streaming video. It seems like video downloads have to buffer more often now, to the point that I can hardly watch them. I have 2 Gig of RAM memory. When I look at my Resource Monitor in Vista, I am using about 1 Gig. The cached memory is around 1.4 Gig. Free memory is near nothing. It is usually about 15 Meg and it drops to zero. It looks like my hard drive is pretty active and I may be accessing virtual memory while downloading videos. I think that I should try reducing the size of the cache memory. I have tried cleaning cache memory and that doesn't seem to make any difference. I found out how to modify the amount of virtual memory, but not the cache memory. Thanks. Assuming you're using IE, open the control panel and then open internet options. On the General Tab in the middle where it says Browsing History click on the settings button - there you will be able to set the maximum space IE should use to cache its' data. You could also try defragging your hard drive to see if it improves video playback. Thanks for the quick reply. I would like to pester you one more time. I checked on the IE setting for disk space for temporary internet files. It is set at only 50 MB. I also did a defrag. I called up the Performance monitor that is in task manager. When only IE is running, the Physical memory is at 2045 total, 1521 cached, and 15 free. Physical memory usage is at 716 MB. Total Kernel memory is 141. Handles are 18525 and threads are 782. CPU, Disk, and Network usages are all very low. When I try to download a video, these numbers don't change much, but you see more disk activity. Does anything look wrong here? I still think that I have a problem with the amount of free memory being so low. Also, I couldn't find any help info about handles and threads, but they seem kind of high to me. I can see some threads listed in the CPU portion of the Resource Monitor, but the total number is not near as high. Could the high cache memory be coming from somewhere else other than internet use? Also, as a side note, when I looked at the cache memory size through IE, it also allows me to view the temporary files which it says are located on my C: drive. When I "view files" it brings me to the "Temporary Internet Files" folder. I can see that there are a few files there and I can clean them out by deleting them through internet options. The weird thing is that when I look at the folder properties it says it has a bunch of folders and is at 650 MB even after being cleaned without anything visible in it. Also, I can't find "Temporary Internet Files" folder by using Windows Explorer, only by viewing the files through IE. It gives me the location of the folder, but I can't find it. Maybe they are stored in a combination of disk and RAM space and this is OK or maybe something else is hosed here also. Thanks for your help. I am trying to find out if I have a problem with memory use or if I need to search elsewhere to fix my streaming video problem. |
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Assuming you're using IE, open the control panel and then open internet
options. On the General Tab in the middle where it says Browsing History click on the settings button - there you will be able to set the maximum space IE should use to cache its' data. You could also try defragging your hard drive to see if it improves video playback. Thanks for the quick reply. I would like to pester you one more time. I checked on the IE setting for disk space for temporary internet files. It is set at only 50 MB. I also did a defrag. I called up the Performance monitor that is in task manager. When only IE is running, the Physical memory is at 2045 total, 1521 cached, and 15 free. Physical memory usage is at 716 MB. Total Kernel memory is 141. Handles are 18525 and threads are 782. CPU, Disk, and Network usages are all very low. When I try to download a video, these numbers don't change much, but you see more disk activity. Does anything look wrong here? I still think that I have a problem with the amount of free memory being so low. Also, I couldn't find any help info about handles and threads, but they seem kind of high to me. I can see some threads listed in the CPU portion of the Resource Monitor, but the total number is not near as high. Could the high cache memory be coming from somewhere else other than internet use? Also, as a side note, when I looked at the cache memory size through IE, it also allows me to view the temporary files which it says are located on my C: drive. When I "view files" it brings me to the "Temporary Internet Files" folder. I can see that there are a few files there and I can clean them out by deleting them through internet options. The weird thing is that when I look at the folder properties it says it has a bunch of folders and is at 650 MB even after being cleaned without anything visible in it. Also, I can't find "Temporary Internet Files" folder by using Windows Explorer, only by viewing the files through IE. It gives me the location of the folder, but I can't find it. Maybe they are stored in a combination of disk and RAM space and this is OK or maybe something else is hosed here also. Thanks for your help. I am trying to find out if I have a problem with memory use or if I need to search elsewhere to fix my streaming video problem. In order to see the temporary internet files folder (TIFF) in the Vista Explorer you need to unhide hidden files and protected operating system files in folder options. I prefer to use Windows Commander (my favorite file manager) to view hidden files and folders - it's easier and I don't have to change Explorer settings. To fully delete the TIFF I recommend CCleaner. It's free and it deletes the folders and Index.DAT file as well as the data. Regarding free memory, no matter how much RAM you put in the machine Windows will dedicate what isn't being used by applications to it's RAM cache (different than the IE disk cache). The extra RAM doesn't appear to be free, but Windows makes it available to applications when they ask for it. Two gigs of RAM is adequate for Vista in my experience - lack of ram should not be the cause of the video playback issue as long as you don't have multiple applications open that are hogging ram. You could try a third party defragger like PerfectDisk (free fully functional thirty day trial-ware from www.perfectdisk.com ) which will defrag the page file and other system files that the Vista defrag program will not touch. You could also try a different browser to see if it makes a difference. I use Firefox and Maxthon - sometimes video playback is better in one or the other though I couldn't say why. Hopefully some of this will help. By the way, what security applications are you using? |
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