Published on March 2, 2003 By SuperheroCanadian In WinCustomize Talk
AS i wait for my the rest of my parts on m new computer, ive been trying to get every ounce of performance out of my current machine so i can make wallpapers again, ya ther is a reason i havnt made anything in a while, my computer has slowd to a snails pace and 3d studio will not run anymore. So im wondering if anyone has any suggestion.

And just outta curiosity what sorta tweeks does everyone else have on there systems
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on Mar 03, 2003
Bryan...some boards have limits on max ram per bank and even what variations of ram will or won't work.
Eg, an old board of mine has 4 slots but will only accept 8 meg in two, even though I have 4 identical 8 meg sticks [edo].
Sometimes the same ram size/config, but different manufacturer can be enough to make it fail...
on Mar 03, 2003
I disagree...I got a Dell Laptop 2.4Ghz, 1 gig ram, 60gig hd, 64mb ati readeon 9000. Got another 60 gigger on its way....8XDVD/24XCR/CD-RW. 15.4 UXGA (1600X1280 MAX) screen.

This little sucker screams.....cost too much, though..

For the same price (USD3,500) I could have gotten a monster desktop. I travel a lot doing presentations...so I needed a laptop...

BTW, it's true thast putting your swap file on a seperate 'physical' drive (not a partition) will greatly increase system performance!

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on Mar 03, 2003
Same here. My laptop surprised me with how quickly it will do renderings and the like. It's nothing compared to Peff's though; Toshiba Satellite 1415 - 1.8Ghz Celeron, 256MB, 30MB HD, 16 MB GeForce 4, DVD/CDRW.

But mine only cost about 1/3rd of what Peff paid for his. ^_~

It's still nothing compared to my desktop though (which is 'only' an Athlon XP 1700+)
on Mar 03, 2003
Yes, Bryan,

It seems I have a max of 128 per bank. I had two bank, one is broken, so I have on left. Max of 128.
It's indeed an old system. Celeron 333 or something.
on Mar 03, 2003
bit late, but, as much ram as you can stuff into it is great, but, you do need to optimize it no matter what when running graphics apps.

Programs, bleed in memory, taking little chunks ( allocating small areas ) that they do not always release. DLL's will TSR ( Terminate and Stay Resident) on you for a couple of different reasones. One being faster loading of the application the next time around, which, is somethin gyou have to off set against usable memory loss for other applications and rendering. One of the other reasons is that some programs just don't care, sloppy code, or something is hooked that doesn't release a certain register in memory so a small part sticks. As with hard drive allocation units, there is a set size and even a small amount of data that does not fill that unit, will in fact make the rest of it look used and for it to be passed over when something is looking for a slot to load code into....

Memory optimization, releaseing memory is a good thing, Unloading DLL's of closed programs can be tricky, but it is also another good thing once you know which ones you can unload and which you have to leave...

anyway... the above is personal opinion which is mine and mine alone as far as known to me, no small animals were used in testing and Dolphin safe nets are always used...

take it for what you wil, something's to consider.


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on Mar 03, 2003
u might wanna ge an upgrade paxx, u can build a decent box for around 200$ now
on Mar 03, 2003
I have found that using RAM optimizers causes my hard drive to chatter like an angry squirrel....
Just my opinion and no squirrels were harmed in anyway (well not more than a few anyhow).

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on Mar 03, 2003
Oh ,yep Jam thats normal for them, I turn off the automatic part and then I set the size for recovery after trying different settings for the best results.

Then when I want I click and dump to recver in 64 meg chunks

Otherwise it does do the sector grind and frankly can slow your drive down because of fragmentation of files and such..

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on Mar 03, 2003
Ram Optimizers should have a setting to minimize to the system tray, and then you can recover with a click... I dunno, it's a personal choice, but with heavy editing of graphics it can make a huge difference in speed of refreshing the work and also rendering if you clear and recover memory before hand...

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on Mar 03, 2003
Ram Optimizers should have a setting to minimize to the system tray, and then you can recover with a click... I dunno, it's a personal choice, but with heavy editing of graphics it can make a huge difference in speed of refreshing the work and also rendering if you clear and recover memory before hand...

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on Mar 03, 2003
I find that a good and safe PC Cleaner works wonders; it's amazing the amount of junk that one collects be it internet or otherwise. Regular cleanups are vital. This also applies to the registry. I use jv16 power tools -especially for registry cleanup- and it does make a difference. This software has the facility of back-ups (freeware).

Also the amount of services that you have running in windows background by default slows down any PC quite a bit. Many of these services can run manually or be disabled altogether. Of course, these depend on your needs!

Other optimization software like: Norton System Tools, System Mechanic or Ontrack Repair-it software do make sure that your PC is running at a safe pace.

Installing heavy-consuming software or images at the root of your hard disk does also help.

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