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Windows

Making boot-up faster
David Dorn pens a few words of advice for
folks whose PCs take ages to start up.
This article applies to your operating
system.
When you go to boot your PC, have you got time to
make a cuppa before it’s finished starting up? There are a few
things you can do to speed things up – just follow this checklist:
RAM
Make sure you have enough RAM installed. Windows 95
and Windows 98 (and SE) need at least 32MB all for themselves, while
Windows Me needs 64MB. Both Windows 2000 and Windows XP need 128MB.
These are minimum figures, and are required purely to load the
operating system.
Applications will require more than this – so, for
Windows 95 and Windows 98 aim for a minimum of 64MB – indeed, double
up the minimum figures for each operating system, or bite the bullet
and go for 512MB as a base line.
Hard Disk Speed
A slow hard disk is no help. Check it regularly
using Defrag, and keep it as defragmented as possible. Windows NT
family users (NT, 2000 and XP) should opt for the NTFS filing
system, which is faster than FAT or FAT32. If you’re feeling flush (
or she who must be obeyed isn’t looking) you might want to invest in
a new, super-fast hard disk, especially if your current one is on
the small and slow side.
Hard Disk Space
Not a lot of people know this, but Windows likes to
have a swap file always to hand. If there’s not enough space on your
hard disk to create the right size of file, it can take ages for
boot-up to happen. As it happens, you need at least 3MB of space for
each Megabyte of RAM in your machine – so that’s one and a half
Gigabytes for 512MB of RAM. Still sure you want to keep that 6GB
hard disk as your C: drive?
Fonts
How many fonts have you got installed? Windows,
silly thing that it is, just has to plough through each and
every one, enumerating it and adding it to the font list every time
it starts up. So go and have a look at the FONTS icon in Control
Panel, to see whether you can get rid of any. There are some you’ll
definitely need to keep, some you’ve probably never used, and never
will. Slim them down as far as you can. It’s not big, and it’s not
clever (and it’s very s-l-o-w) to have 1346 fonts on your PC, all
active. It slows down applications, too.
Programs loading at Startup
Far too many applications and utilities drop
themselves into the Startup Folder at install time. Have a look and
see just how many you have. You can take FindFast out of there, for
a start – it just gets in the way – and make sure that you have the
very minimum number of programs loading as part of your boot
sequence. I’d stick with your Anti-Virus and your Firewall, and very
little else (and I can manage without loading either at boot time,
truth be told).
Network
Running a network? That can slow things down. Check
out your network settings and clear the check boxes that re-connect
you to networked drives at boot – set your system to connect as and
when you need them.
Check also whether you’re assigning IP addresses
manually or via DHCP (this is your home network – it does not apply
to dial-up networking). If the latter, consider changing things
around, and assigning an address in the private range (192.168.0.1 –
192.168.0.255) manually to each machine. Doing that can shave
minutes off your boot time, as your PC doesn’t go hunting around for
the information.
Consider, as well, whether you can manage without
your network for this session.
Screen Furniture
Do you need that wallpaper image loaded? It takes
time. Also consider the number of desktop icons you have – the more,
the slower.
Exit cleanly
Make sure you follow the proper shutdown procedure
for your version of Windows – if you just flick the Big Red Switch,
the next time you boot, it’ll go through a full hard disk check. If
you’ve got a half full 80GB drive, you can take the dog for a walk
before it will finish.
Get all those points right, and you’ll have a system
that boots as quickly as is possible. Time for me to exit cleanly
now!
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