| Disk defragger besides Norton? |
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Index ‹ Windows XP ‹ Windows XP Hardware
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- 1
- Windows XP >> Boot DiskI need to go to DOS (not the DOS in Windows) to update my
BIOS and Award Flash Utilities. For this I need a floppy
start-up boot disk from WIN XP Home. How do I make a
WINxp start-up disk? Do I need to insert the CD for WIN
XP?
Don
- 2
- Windows XP Security >> XP repair problemWhen I tried to repair my Windos XP using the OS CD ,it
is asking me for activation and dailing an ISD no. or
else it is not booting up.
Please tell me how to avoid dialing an ISD No. as it will
cost me too much,I want to activate my XP by dialing the
ISP and getting connected to internet which will cost me
only local telephone charges,but for that I need to boot
up my machine,I am residing in INDIA.plz suggest me what
to do.
Expecting a solution at the earliest.
My windows XP is licensed version which came along with
my Caompaq PC.
Regards,
A.Sengupta
- 3
- Windows XP Hardware >> Dualview/Multiple monitorsHi
Ive got a laptop that uses dualview to allow me to attach
another monitor and see exactly the same thing on my LCD
screen and the other monitor.
Problem is I want to use powerpoint to show the slideshow
on one screen and the slides editor on the other. I
gather that this is the Primary/secondary monitor
function.
Can I disable the dualview or is there a workaround.
Cheers
Malc.
- 4
- Windows XP Network >> modem connection via manual operator phone lineI am having problems connectiong a modem wher:
1 I ring the operator; tell them the ISP phone no & then
hang up
2 The operator rings ISP, waits for answer then calls me
3 I try and get modem to talk to ISP.
I can hear noises from ISP & my modem, but they do
not "connect" to each other.
I have tried callback & the manual connection as descride
in Help.
Has anyone found this problem (& a solution as well)
many thanks,
Brian Gover
- 5
- Windows XP >> XP wants to burn all of my music files to CDHey y'all,
I just re-installed XP Pro and upgraded to WMP 11 (from 9).
When I boot up the PC I get a little yellow dialog box stating that I have
files waiting to be burned to CD. When I click on the dialog box, it opens
a window that has all of the folders from 'My Music' showing.
How do I tell it that I don't want to burn all of these files to CD?
I tried deleting one to see what would happen and it disappeared from 'My
Music'. I don't want to delete all of my music. lol
Any ideas?
TIA,
Mike W.
- 6
- Windows XP >> "No Network Places"We have several Win XP Pro machines on a small office
network. On a few of them (and the list seems to change
from time to time), if you browse to My Network Places in
Windows Explorer then nothing shows up at all. No
shortcuts, no folders, no "Entire Network" icon, nothing.
Refreshes do no good.
The network is out there; file and printer sharing work
fine to and from the afflicted workstations. You simply
can't browse to anywhere through My Network Places.
On some of the other XP Pro systems, network shortcuts
show up, but you have to hit Refresh once to get "Entire
Network" to appear. After that single Refresh, browsing
the network works normally.
Sound familiar to anyone?
- 7
- 8
- Windows XP Setup >> lost filesi had a problem with my monitor , so after talking to my
computer retailer he sugestted that my problem was that
i should reinstall windows xp again.... my broblem was
that when i started my computer i would get all the
screen displays as per normal but after the windows flag
and the green light that goes back and forth my monitor
goes blank....i tried to repair with windows but the same
problem was there. it would only work if i installed the
intire windows cd
- 9
- Windows XP >> What's ClientSideProxy.exe?? Help!Hello,
I was wondering if I should let ClientSideProxy.exe access the Internet?
ZoneAlarm keeps asking me that and I don't know what to do. I'm using
Windows XP and my ISP is MSN.
Thanks a lot,
Al
- 10
- Windows XP Setup >> AGPCPQ.SYSDear,
I have several computers Dell (optiplex 260, 270 and Dell
Latitude D600 and C600)and I need "one" core image for
those PC's. After the installation on a 260 with sysprep
and Powerquest, I can restore it on the optiplex
(desktops) but it failed on the D600(laptops). I receive
the error AGPCPQ.SYS.
Can someone help me with this issue?
Regards,
Thomas.
thomas.de.bolle@kim-consulting.be
- 11
- Windows XP >> PFN_LIST CORRUPT and the BSODI have not used my floppy disk drive on this Dell 4600 PC running Windows XP
Home for ages. Today when I tried to use it, the computer crashed with
"PFN_LIST CORRUPT as the BSOD message. I have run a memory test and it is
fine. Any clues?
--
Thanks - Ted
- 12
- Windows XP Hardware >> Serial ATA drivers for windows XP pre SP1Hey,
I just built a new system with an asus A8V-deluxe, AMD 64 bit processor,
Sony ATA DVD/CD/RW, and a serial ATA maxtor 250 gig harddrive. The harddrive
serial ATA controller is part of the chipset on my motherboard.
The hardware is all working just fine. But I need to install windows XP
professional to my new hard drive (it is formatted, partitioned), and my
CD-ROM is pre-SP1. My version of XP apparently doesn't support serial ATA,
so when I boot to the XP CD-ROM and it tries to install, it doesn't recognize
any hard drives and aborts.
You know how during the install you can hit F6 and provide outside
manufacturers drivers for other hardware. I tried that, but don't actually
have the SATA drivers in a format the windows installer will recognize. I'm
currently waiting for ASUS to get back to me in the hopes they can help.
Has anyone encountered this (or a similar) problem? Anyone know where I can
get the required drivers?
Thanks,
edmckay_doc@yahoo.com
- 13
- Windows XP Support >> NTI CD&DVD Maker 7When trying to use my NTI program I am getting an error message:
The drive database file CDRW32.BDB Can not be found.
How do I fix this? This program was working in the past...
- 14
- Windows XP Setup >> Adding audio cardA year or so ago I put an audio card on my son's computer, that had the
audio and video on the motherboard when we bought it. I had a
relatively major crash that was related to corrupted files in the boot
record, and I had to do a full recovery, reformatting the disk. I can't
find the driver disks for the audio card, but found some on the internet
and installed them. I recall when I first installed the audio card I
had to disable the built in audio to make it work, but I can't recall
how it was done. Any suggestions?
- 15
- Windows XP >> Add/Remove ProgramsHi folks,
I've got several programs that are uninstalled but still appear on my
Add/Remove Programs list as if they are still operational. Could anyone
direct me as to how to remove the entries, preferably without having to
download and install programs to do it for me?
Many thanks for your time.
Danny.
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TaurArian

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Posted: Sun Oct 24 01:22:03 CDT 2004 |
Top |
Windows XP Hardware >> Disk defragger besides Norton?
Basides Norton, what's the next best disk diagnosis/defrag app?
Windows XP546
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Vanguardx

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Posted: Sun Oct 24 01:22:03 CDT 2004 |
Top |
Windows XP Hardware >> Disk defragger besides Norton?
"mrbog" <EMail@HideDomain.com>
wrote in news:EMail@HideDomain.com:
> Basides Norton, what's the next best disk diagnosis/defrag app?
For defragmenter:
PerfectDisk
Diskeeper
For disk diagnosis, depends on what you want to diagnose. Not sure
there is anything that will test a disk more thoroughly than SpinRite.
--
_________________________________________________________________
******** Post replies to newsgroup - Share with others ********
Email: lh_811newsATyahooDOTcom and append "=NEWS=" to Subject.
_________________________________________________________________
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Bob

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Posted: Sun Oct 24 08:25:30 CDT 2004 |
Top |
Windows XP Hardware >> Disk defragger besides Norton?
mrbog wrote:
> Basides Norton, what's the next best disk diagnosis/defrag app?
Since defragging has little value on most PCs, my definition of best
is cheapest -- meaning the one included with XP.
--
Cheers, Bob
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Peter

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Posted: Sun Oct 24 09:12:10 CDT 2004 |
Top |
Windows XP Hardware >> Disk defragger besides Norton?
On Sun, 24 Oct 2004 09:25:30 -0400, Bob Willard
<EMail@HideDomain.com> wrote:
>mrbog wrote:
>
>> Basides Norton, what's the next best disk diagnosis/defrag app?
>
>Since defragging has little value on most PCs, my definition of best
>is cheapest -- meaning the one included with XP.
On what basis do you say that "defragging has little value on most
PCs"? My experience it that it depends on how much free space you have
on the disk partition, but that disk fragmentation can make a
significant difference to Windows performance. On my own system, where
none of the partitions approach half full, the boot partition gets
very fragmented, but I would have to admit that this doesn't seem to
slow things down perceptibly. On my wife's system, which has the same
motherboard, an only slightly slower processor, and a comparable hard
disk, but where, for "historical" reasons, the boot partition only has
15-20% free space, there is an easily perceptible slowdown
(particularly of program loading) when this partition needs
defragmenting, and a comparable speedup when this has been done. Both
systems have their swap files on separate dedicated partitions, so
this isn't a swap file fragmentation problem.
Please respond to the Newsgroup, so that others may benefit from the exchange.
Peter R. Fletcher
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Bob

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Posted: Sun Oct 24 16:59:05 CDT 2004 |
Top |
Windows XP Hardware >> Disk defragger besides Norton?
Peter R. Fletcher wrote:
> On Sun, 24 Oct 2004 09:25:30 -0400, Bob Willard
> <EMail@HideDomain.com> wrote:
>
>
>>mrbog wrote:
>>
>>
>>>Basides Norton, what's the next best disk diagnosis/defrag app?
>>
>>Since defragging has little value on most PCs, my definition of best
>>is cheapest -- meaning the one included with XP.
>
>
> On what basis do you say that "defragging has little value on most
> PCs"? My experience it that it depends on how much free space you have
> on the disk partition, but that disk fragmentation can make a
> significant difference to Windows performance. On my own system, where
> none of the partitions approach half full, the boot partition gets
> very fragmented, but I would have to admit that this doesn't seem to
> slow things down perceptibly. On my wife's system, which has the same
> motherboard, an only slightly slower processor, and a comparable hard
> disk, but where, for "historical" reasons, the boot partition only has
> 15-20% free space, there is an easily perceptible slowdown
> (particularly of program loading) when this partition needs
> defragmenting, and a comparable speedup when this has been done. Both
> systems have their swap files on separate dedicated partitions, so
> this isn't a swap file fragmentation problem.
>
> Please respond to the Newsgroup, so that others may benefit from the exchange.
> Peter R. Fletcher
On the half-dozen NT/W2K/XP PCs I've had, I've never noticed any difference
in performance resulting from running defrag. On the half-dozen W9x/W3.x
PCs I've had, I kinda think I sometimes noticed a difference, but it was
marginal at most. Some of those PCs - esp. the W3.x and early W9x ones -
included parts, boot and non-boot, that were >75% full {since I did guess
wrong about part. growth, and did not juggle the parts or the files until
defrag would no longer run}; still, defrag made little or no difference.
By contrast, my experience with RCs (you know, Real Computers ;-) running
real OSs) showed some substantial-to-enormous gains from defragging. There
were many reports from VMS users on the value of defragging -- even from
the early years of VMS when its filesystem did not support on-line defragging
and so required shutting down the system for a backup/restore cycle to
accomplish a defrag. I did a survey a few times of the dozen or more VMS
RCs on which I had accounts, and found that the HDs averaged, IIRC, ~85% full.
--
Cheers, Bob
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tallyman

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Posted: Sun Oct 24 11:00:22 CDT 2004 |
Top |
Windows XP Hardware >> Disk defragger besides Norton?
For disk diagnosis it's best to use the manufacturer's own softwar
(plus it's free). For defragmentation I haven't found a good freewar
one, but there's Diskeeper which is commercially available and VoptX
which is available as a download - both do a good job
-
tallyma
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted via http://www.mcse.m
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
View this thread: http://www.mcse.ms/message1177701.htm
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Trent©

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Posted: Sun Oct 24 21:06:25 CDT 2004 |
Top |
Windows XP Hardware >> Disk defragger besides Norton?
On 23 Oct 2004 22:48:11 -0700, EMail@HideDomain.com (mrbog) wrote:
>Basides Norton, what's the next best disk diagnosis/defrag app?
Vopt.
Have a nice one...
Trent
Budweiser: Helping ugly people have sex since 1876!
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Peter

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Posted: Mon Oct 25 05:20:04 CDT 2004 |
Top |
Windows XP Hardware >> Disk defragger besides Norton?
On Sun, 24 Oct 2004 17:59:05 -0400, Bob Willard
<EMail@HideDomain.com> wrote:
>Peter R. Fletcher wrote:
>> On Sun, 24 Oct 2004 09:25:30 -0400, Bob Willard
>> <EMail@HideDomain.com> wrote:
>>
>>
>>>mrbog wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>>Basides Norton, what's the next best disk diagnosis/defrag app?
>>>
>>>Since defragging has little value on most PCs, my definition of best
>>>is cheapest -- meaning the one included with XP.
>>
>>
>> On what basis do you say that "defragging has little value on most
>> PCs"? My experience it that it depends on how much free space you have
>> on the disk partition, but that disk fragmentation can make a
>> significant difference to Windows performance. On my own system, where
>> none of the partitions approach half full, the boot partition gets
>> very fragmented, but I would have to admit that this doesn't seem to
>> slow things down perceptibly. On my wife's system, which has the same
>> motherboard, an only slightly slower processor, and a comparable hard
>> disk, but where, for "historical" reasons, the boot partition only has
>> 15-20% free space, there is an easily perceptible slowdown
>> (particularly of program loading) when this partition needs
>> defragmenting, and a comparable speedup when this has been done. Both
>> systems have their swap files on separate dedicated partitions, so
>> this isn't a swap file fragmentation problem.
>>
>> Please respond to the Newsgroup, so that others may benefit from the exchange.
>> Peter R. Fletcher
>
>On the half-dozen NT/W2K/XP PCs I've had, I've never noticed any difference
>in performance resulting from running defrag. On the half-dozen W9x/W3.x
>PCs I've had, I kinda think I sometimes noticed a difference, but it was
>marginal at most. Some of those PCs - esp. the W3.x and early W9x ones -
>included parts, boot and non-boot, that were >75% full {since I did guess
>wrong about part. growth, and did not juggle the parts or the files until
>defrag would no longer run}; still, defrag made little or no difference.
>
>By contrast, my experience with RCs (you know, Real Computers ;-) running
>real OSs) showed some substantial-to-enormous gains from defragging. There
>were many reports from VMS users on the value of defragging -- even from
>the early years of VMS when its filesystem did not support on-line defragging
>and so required shutting down the system for a backup/restore cycle to
>accomplish a defrag. I did a survey a few times of the dozen or more VMS
>RCs on which I had accounts, and found that the HDs averaged, IIRC, ~85% full.
Hmmm! The only other difference here is that I am running XP Pro and
my wife is running XP Home. I don't think that is likely to be
relevant.
Please respond to the Newsgroup, so that others may benefit from the exchange.
Peter R. Fletcher
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Art

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Posted: Mon Oct 25 07:35:41 CDT 2004 |
Top |
Windows XP Hardware >> Disk defragger besides Norton?
"Peter R. Fletcher" <pfletch(at)fletchers(hyphen)uk.com> wrote in message
news:EMail@HideDomain.com...
> On Sun, 24 Oct 2004 17:59:05 -0400, Bob Willard
> <EMail@HideDomain.com> wrote:
>
>>Peter R. Fletcher wrote:
>>> On Sun, 24 Oct 2004 09:25:30 -0400, Bob Willard
>>> <EMail@HideDomain.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>>>mrbog wrote:
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>>Basides Norton, what's the next best disk diagnosis/defrag app?
>>>>
>>>>Since defragging has little value on most PCs, my definition of best
>>>>is cheapest -- meaning the one included with XP.
>>>
>>>
>>> On what basis do you say that "defragging has little value on most
>>> PCs"? My experience it that it depends on how much free space you have
>>> on the disk partition, but that disk fragmentation can make a
>>> significant difference to Windows performance. On my own system, where
>>> none of the partitions approach half full, the boot partition gets
>>> very fragmented, but I would have to admit that this doesn't seem to
>>> slow things down perceptibly. On my wife's system, which has the same
>>> motherboard, an only slightly slower processor, and a comparable hard
>>> disk, but where, for "historical" reasons, the boot partition only has
>>> 15-20% free space, there is an easily perceptible slowdown
>>> (particularly of program loading) when this partition needs
>>> defragmenting, and a comparable speedup when this has been done. Both
>>> systems have their swap files on separate dedicated partitions, so
>>> this isn't a swap file fragmentation problem.
>>>
>>> Please respond to the Newsgroup, so that others may benefit from the
>>> exchange.
>>> Peter R. Fletcher
>>
>>On the half-dozen NT/W2K/XP PCs I've had, I've never noticed any
>>difference
>>in performance resulting from running defrag. On the half-dozen W9x/W3.x
>>PCs I've had, I kinda think I sometimes noticed a difference, but it was
>>marginal at most. Some of those PCs - esp. the W3.x and early W9x ones -
>>included parts, boot and non-boot, that were >75% full {since I did guess
>>wrong about part. growth, and did not juggle the parts or the files until
>>defrag would no longer run}; still, defrag made little or no difference.
>>
>>By contrast, my experience with RCs (you know, Real Computers ;-) running
>>real OSs) showed some substantial-to-enormous gains from defragging.
>>There
>>were many reports from VMS users on the value of defragging -- even from
>>the early years of VMS when its filesystem did not support on-line
>>defragging
>>and so required shutting down the system for a backup/restore cycle to
>>accomplish a defrag. I did a survey a few times of the dozen or more VMS
>>RCs on which I had accounts, and found that the HDs averaged, IIRC, ~85%
>>full.
>
> Hmmm! The only other difference here is that I am running XP Pro and
> my wife is running XP Home. I don't think that is likely to be
> relevant.
>
> Please respond to the Newsgroup, so that others may benefit from the
> exchange.
> Peter R. Fletcher
In the February, 2004 issue of PC World magazine, they reported their
evaluation of defragmenters. Here's the pertinent excerpt from their
article...
"When the PC World Test Center set out to determine the effectiveness of the
defrag utilities in our set of suites, plus that of Diskeeper 8 from
Executive Software, our analysts found no evidence that defragmentation
enhanced performance. On a desktop system from the PC World office with a
heavily used, never-defragmented hard drive, the lab conducted speed tests
using a range of applications before and after defragmenting the drive with
each utility. In the end, the Test Center saw no significant performance
improvement after defragmenting with any program. This result flies in the
face of the perceived wisdom that fragmentation hinders performance, though
much older PCs (with slower and smaller hard drives) and heavily used
servers may benefit more from defragging."
I might add that about three years ago, some friends and myself performed
rather extensive tests of a number of third-party defragmenters as well as
the built-in defragmenters in Windows 98 and Windows Me, and to some extent,
in Windows 95. Our objective was to determine which one(s) were most
effective in defragmenting a hard disk in terms of enhancing speed
performance. To our surprise (at least for most of us!) we came to the
conclusion that *none* of the defragmenters resulted in any performance
enhancement. We measured some of the common tasks undertaken by the computer
user, e.g., bootup time, accessing programs, search & replace functions,
manipulating digital images, and the like. The conclusion we drew was
identical to that of PC World, i.e., there was no meaningful performance
enhancement resulting from the use of defragmenters. At the time we
concluded these tests Windows XP was just coming online so we didn't conduct
any extensive tests on that OS, but from some cursory tests we ran using
XP's defragmenting utility, our previous conclusions concerning the
ineffectiveness of the defragmentation process remained unchanged.
Art
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Peter

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Posted: Mon Oct 25 15:26:11 CDT 2004 |
Top |
Windows XP Hardware >> Disk defragger besides Norton?
On Mon, 25 Oct 2004 08:35:41 -0400, "Art" <EMail@HideDomain.com>
wrote:
>>>> My experience it that it depends on how much free space you have
>>>> on the disk partition, but that disk fragmentation can make a
>>>> significant difference to Windows performance. On my own system, where
>>>> none of the partitions approach half full, the boot partition gets
>>>> very fragmented, but I would have to admit that this doesn't seem to
>>>> slow things down perceptibly. On my wife's system, which has the same
>>>> motherboard, an only slightly slower processor, and a comparable hard
>>>> disk, but where, for "historical" reasons, the boot partition only has
>>>> 15-20% free space, there is an easily perceptible slowdown
>>>> (particularly of program loading) when this partition needs
>>>> defragmenting, and a comparable speedup when this has been done. Both
>>>> systems have their swap files on separate dedicated partitions, so
>>>> this isn't a swap file fragmentation problem.
>>>>
>>>> Please respond to the Newsgroup, so that others may benefit from the
>>>> exchange.
>>>> Peter R. Fletcher
>>>
>>>On the half-dozen NT/W2K/XP PCs I've had, I've never noticed any
>>>difference
>>>in performance resulting from running defrag. On the half-dozen W9x/W3.x
>>>PCs I've had, I kinda think I sometimes noticed a difference, but it was
>>>marginal at most. Some of those PCs - esp. the W3.x and early W9x ones -
>>>included parts, boot and non-boot, that were >75% full {since I did guess
>>>wrong about part. growth, and did not juggle the parts or the files until
>>>defrag would no longer run}; still, defrag made little or no difference.
>>>
>>>By contrast, my experience with RCs (you know, Real Computers ;-) running
>>>real OSs) showed some substantial-to-enormous gains from defragging.
>>>There
>>>were many reports from VMS users on the value of defragging -- even from
>>>the early years of VMS when its filesystem did not support on-line
>>>defragging
>>>and so required shutting down the system for a backup/restore cycle to
>>>accomplish a defrag. I did a survey a few times of the dozen or more VMS
>>>RCs on which I had accounts, and found that the HDs averaged, IIRC, ~85%
>>>full.
>>
>> Hmmm! The only other difference here is that I am running XP Pro and
>> my wife is running XP Home. I don't think that is likely to be
>> relevant.
>>
>> Please respond to the Newsgroup, so that others may benefit from the
>> exchange.
>> Peter R. Fletcher
>
>In the February, 2004 issue of PC World magazine, they reported their
>evaluation of defragmenters. Here's the pertinent excerpt from their
>article...
>
>"When the PC World Test Center set out to determine the effectiveness of the
>defrag utilities in our set of suites, plus that of Diskeeper 8 from
>Executive Software, our analysts found no evidence that defragmentation
>enhanced performance. On a desktop system from the PC World office with a
>heavily used, never-defragmented hard drive, the lab conducted speed tests
>using a range of applications before and after defragmenting the drive with
>each utility. In the end, the Test Center saw no significant performance
>improvement after defragmenting with any program. This result flies in the
>face of the perceived wisdom that fragmentation hinders performance, though
>much older PCs (with slower and smaller hard drives) and heavily used
>servers may benefit more from defragging."
>
>I might add that about three years ago, some friends and myself performed
>rather extensive tests of a number of third-party defragmenters as well as
>the built-in defragmenters in Windows 98 and Windows Me, and to some extent,
>in Windows 95. Our objective was to determine which one(s) were most
>effective in defragmenting a hard disk in terms of enhancing speed
>performance. To our surprise (at least for most of us!) we came to the
>conclusion that *none* of the defragmenters resulted in any performance
>enhancement. We measured some of the common tasks undertaken by the computer
>user, e.g., bootup time, accessing programs, search & replace functions,
>manipulating digital images, and the like. The conclusion we drew was
>identical to that of PC World, i.e., there was no meaningful performance
>enhancement resulting from the use of defragmenters. At the time we
>concluded these tests Windows XP was just coming online so we didn't conduct
>any extensive tests on that OS, but from some cursory tests we ran using
>XP's defragmenting utility, our previous conclusions concerning the
>ineffectiveness of the defragmentation process remained unchanged.
>
>Art
>
My experience doesn't contradict their findings (or yours) unless the
fragmented partition is also quite (> 80%) full. I would be interested
to know how much free space there was on the test partitions.
Please respond to the Newsgroup, so that others may benefit from the exchange.
Peter R. Fletcher
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Index ‹ Windows XP ‹ Windows XP Hardware |
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- 1
- 2
- Windows XP Hardware >> Logitech webcamHello
I would like to reinstall a Logitech camera into my Windows Messenger without messing up my system again. Can anyone help? I have a XP system
Annie
- 3
- customize >> slipstreaming xp corporate files inquiryIs there a list kept somewhere that indicates what files are compatible with
svcpack.inf?
I slipstreamed all "critical" updates and hotfixes current as of today, but
I also combined the "recommended" updates as well.
Windows Media Player 9 doesn't seem too friendly as an error during XP
installation pops up saying system restore won't work if the "original"
windows media player (assuming its 8) isn't installed first, and that WMP9
should be installed separately.
Another error popped up defining the uses of switches which I was already
using: ie)
[SetupHotfixesToRun]
update.exe -q -n
Q330994.exe /Q:A /R:N
Q819696.exe /Q /O /N /Z
/Q - Quiet mode
/Q:A - Administrator Quiet mode, which does not display any dialog boxes to
the user
/R:A - Always restart
/R:N - Never restart
/R:S - Silent restart
Since I know what these switches mean already, then I need to know what
updates will work and which ones won't.
Having a list of which updates are and are not compatible would sure be nice
for my WinXP Pro SP1 package.
---
Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).
Version: 6.0.661 / Virus Database: 424 - Release Date: 4/19/2004
- 4
- Windows XP Network >> Remote Desktop/ Cannot ConnectHI, I am trying to setup RDT on a computer using XP Pro and connected via a
router. Using help I have enabled my computer to use the service but when I
try to connect to mine using a friends computer via either the web or the RDT
dialog box I cannot connect.
The friends computer also uses XP Pro and a router.
My IP is 86.139.91.xx
His IP is 82.18.68.xx
Both our sub masks are 255.255.255.0
I have tried pinging but that times out. I feel that if we can ping each
other RDT "might" work.
I hope someone can help as I have been on this for hours.
Thanks
--
colinlam
- 5
- Windows XP Hardware >> Sound TroubleshootingMy computer does not have sound at the moment. When I attempt to open the volume control, a message pops up saying "There are no active mixer devices available. To install mixer devices, go to Control Panel" etc. However, my sound devices are installed and read as working properly. Any advice on how to solve this problem would be greatly appreciated. Thanks.
- 6
- Windows XP Network >> Network works, but can't "see" routerXP Pro
Though my network works fine, my desktop can't see my netgear router
(RP614).
I have a simple network: I have DSL service. My desktop, notebook, and
printer server are connected by wire to my Netgear router.
Everything works fine. Both computers get on the Internet, and both
computers can print. (And I can scan to both comptuers.
I can log on to my router from my notebook, but I can't log on from my
desktop. ("Page cannot be displayed")
I can't ping the router from my desktop either.
Although I'm not really affected by this, as I can do all I want from the
desktop, it bothers me.
I spent a lot of time with Netgear on the phone, and they say its an
operating system problem.
Any ideas?
Thanks.
Ken
- 7
- Windows XP Basic >> Start buttonMy start button has moved to the upper left corner of my screen. How do I
return it to the bottom left corner of the screen? Thought it was a simple
drag and drop but doesn't seem to get me there. Thanks.
- 8
- Windows XP Setup >> Wierd actions when typingEverytime i use the keyboard it causes my music to skip in the background
and also if i hold down the ctrl key and then try to select multiple items
it freezes the computer till i let go of the key. Has anyone seen this
before? Thanks in advance for any help.
- 9
- Windows XP Setup >> CREATING NEW PARTITIONI understand that I cannot create a new partition with Windows XP without
destroying what I already have in place or without purchasing 3rd party
software. This is my scenario ... My system came with everything
preinstalled, one hd, and one basic/primary partition for everything. I'm
wanting to create a new partition (logical drive) to maintain system and file
backups. I have another operating system that will automatically and safely
- non-destructively - create a partition within my current configuration to
install itself on (Linux). Hypothetical situation ... do you think that I
could feasibly install that product without autoboot sequence in order to
create the new partition; uninstall it, leaving the partition in place; then
reformat that new partition with XP through the Computer Manager tools in
order to create my desired logical drive/partition? Any advice or
suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
- 10
- Windows XP Security >> Problems with MS security patch MS07-046Hi all,
regarding the recent security patch
MS07-046 "Vulnerability in GDI could allow remote code execution"
I have found that certain applications compiled on Windows XP
Professional with this security patch will crash on different-language
machines (EN versus GER), regardless whether the patch is installed or
not.
I was able to verify this with Visual Studio 6.0 SP6, for an
application witch directly calls GDI functions of the windows API.
Microsoft support will not handle that matter, since VS 6.0 is no
longer supported. Still, I am pretty sure that not the programming
language, but the direct calls to the GDI library cause the problem.
Has anyone of you observed similar problems in programs written in VS
2003 or 2005? I don't expect them to show up if you use the built-in
GDI/GDI+ calls, only if you directly access the windows API (which
probably only legacy code will do).
We've tested it by compiling on an English Windows XP, and testing on
german XP, and vice versa. Don't know about other languages, but I
expect the problem to be similar.
Robert
- 11
- Windows XP Update >> Ox80072EE7When I try to access the latest windows update I ge the following message:
The website has encountered a problem & cannot display the page you are
trying to view.
I appreciate any help.
- 12
- Windows XP Perform Maintain >> Enter button not workingThe enter button on my Dell computer is suddenly not
working. This problem may have started when I downloaded
and installed the most recent version of AIM, but I am
not sure. Also, the enter button DOES work when in 'safe
mode'. Anybody able to help? Please! It is extremely
frustrating.
- 13
- Windows XP Support >> Windows XP won't start. HELPWhen I turn on my computer Windows won't start. I get the Microsoft XP logo
at the beginning and then it goes to the blue screen with a small Windows XP
logo in the middle and then it stays like tat forever. I don't get any error
messages or anything that can tell me what's wrong.
I tried restarting my computer in Safe Mode but it does the same thing. I
also tried the different options in F8, all unsuccessful. It just gets stuck
on that screen.
Can someone tell me how I can fix this without having to use the recovery
disk? I don't want to loose any files. They are very important to me.
Thank you
- 14
- Windows XP Hardware >> Sound help!Just recently my sound has stopped working. I will play a
sound in any program and it just sounds a little fuzzy as
if nothing is playing. I have checked in the advanced
section and all of my mute boxes are unchecked. I have
tried a bunch of other little things but nothing seems to
work. Anyone have any ideas? Thanks!
- 15
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