![]() |
![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() | ![]() |
| Welcome to Windows Vista Forums. Our forum is dedicated to helping you find solutions with any problems, errors or issues you are experiencing with Windows Vista. The Vista forum also covers news and updates and has an extensive Windows Vista tutorial section that covers a wide range of tips and tricks. |
| |||||||
![]() |
| |
| | #1 (permalink) |
| Guest | ReadyBoost I have a western digital 320 gig external hard drive. I was surprised to find out that I couldn't use some of that space with ReadyBoost, or at least the ReadyBoost tab in the device properties says I cant. Its USB 2.0 and it definitely has enough space to support it, so why doesn't it? Thanks in advance for any help, guitardude |
My System Specs![]() |
| | #2 (permalink) |
| Member | Re: ReadyBoost Worth checking out this FAQ on Readyboost to troubleshoot why you're having this problem: Tom Archer's Blog : ReadyBoost Q&A |
My System Specs![]() |
| | #3 (permalink) |
| Guest | Re: ReadyBoost Because it is just a standard hard drive, albiet external. Even if you could get it to work, it wouldn't be any faster as the main purpose of Readyboost is to take advantage of the faster flash memory. Your external drive is no faster than any other hard drive... -- Dustin Harper dharper@xxxxxx http://www.VistaRIP.com | Vista Resource & Information Page "guitardude" <guitardude@xxxxxx> wrote in message news:OOSaFAqaIHA.5984@xxxxxx Quote: >I have a western digital 320 gig external hard drive. I was surprised to >find out that I couldn't use some of that space with ReadyBoost, or at >least the ReadyBoost tab in the device properties says I cant. Its USB 2.0 >and it definitely has enough space to support it, so why doesn't it? Thanks >in advance for any help, > guitardude |
My System Specs![]() |
| | #4 (permalink) |
| Guest | Re: ReadyBoost Thanks to Thiassi and Dustin for your help. I had a feeling it was because the drive wasn't flash based. the FAQ was a lot of help too. it answered many of my other questions about ReadyBoost. I also saw something about Windows SuperFetch. I looked this up and all I could make out was that it might be a part of ReadyBoost (I got a little confused). is this right? If not, how you use it? Thanks again for your help, guitardude "guitardude" <guitardude@xxxxxx> wrote in message news:OOSaFAqaIHA.5984@xxxxxx Quote: > I have a western digital 320 gig external hard drive. I was surprised to > find out that I couldn't use some of that space with ReadyBoost, or at > least the ReadyBoost tab in the device properties says I cant. Its USB 2.0 > and it definitely has enough space to support it, so why doesn't it? > Thanks in advance for any help, > guitardude |
My System Specs![]() |
| | #5 (permalink) |
| Guest | Re: ReadyBoost Superfetch 'learns' how you use your computer, and loads commonly used files into RAM to speed load time for certain programs. It should be enabled by default. -- Dustin Harper dharper@xxxxxx http://www.VistaRIP.com | Vista Resource & Information Page "guitardude" <guitardude@xxxxxx> wrote in message news:OzQgJPraIHA.748@xxxxxx Quote: > Thanks to Thiassi and Dustin for your help. I had a feeling it was because > the drive wasn't flash based. the FAQ was a lot of help too. it answered > many of my other questions about ReadyBoost. I also saw something about > Windows SuperFetch. I looked this up and all I could make out was that it > might be a part of ReadyBoost (I got a little confused). is this right? If > not, how you use it? Thanks again for your help, > guitardude > > "guitardude" <guitardude@xxxxxx> wrote in message > news:OOSaFAqaIHA.5984@xxxxxx Quote: >> I have a western digital 320 gig external hard drive. I was surprised to >> find out that I couldn't use some of that space with ReadyBoost, or at >> least the ReadyBoost tab in the device properties says I cant. Its USB >> 2.0 and it definitely has enough space to support it, so why doesn't it? >> Thanks in advance for any help, >> guitardude |
My System Specs![]() |
| | #6 (permalink) |
| Guest | Re: ReadyBoost Thanks, you have been a great help. guitardude "Dustin Harper" <dharper@xxxxxx> wrote in message news:70446AC1-F2DF-4CEF-8486-B7BA2994DFAB@xxxxxx Quote: > Superfetch 'learns' how you use your computer, and loads commonly used > files into RAM to speed load time for certain programs. It should be > enabled by default. > > -- > Dustin Harper > dharper@xxxxxx > http://www.VistaRIP.com | Vista Resource & Information Page > > > "guitardude" <guitardude@xxxxxx> wrote in message > news:OzQgJPraIHA.748@xxxxxx Quote: >> Thanks to Thiassi and Dustin for your help. I had a feeling it was >> because the drive wasn't flash based. the FAQ was a lot of help too. it >> answered many of my other questions about ReadyBoost. I also saw >> something about Windows SuperFetch. I looked this up and all I could make >> out was that it might be a part of ReadyBoost (I got a little confused). >> is this right? If not, how you use it? Thanks again for your help, >> guitardude >> >> "guitardude" <guitardude@xxxxxx> wrote in message >> news:OOSaFAqaIHA.5984@xxxxxx Quote: >>> I have a western digital 320 gig external hard drive. I was surprised to >>> find out that I couldn't use some of that space with ReadyBoost, or at >>> least the ReadyBoost tab in the device properties says I cant. Its USB >>> 2.0 and it definitely has enough space to support it, so why doesn't it? >>> Thanks in advance for any help, >>> guitardude |
My System Specs![]() |
| | #7 (permalink) |
| Guest | Re: ReadyBoost "guitardude" <guitardude@xxxxxx> wrote in message news:OOSaFAqaIHA.5984@xxxxxx Quote: > I have a western digital 320 gig external hard drive. I was surprised to > find out that I couldn't use some of that space with ReadyBoost, or at > least the ReadyBoost tab in the device properties says I cant. Its USB 2.0 > and it definitely has enough space to support it, so why doesn't it? > Thanks in advance for any help, > guitardude It would be better to just use a bigger swap file on an internal drive. |
My System Specs![]() |
| | #8 (permalink) |
| Guest | Re: ReadyBoost how do I change my swap file's size. what is the recommended size for best performance when matched with 2 gigs of physical ram? thanks, guitardude "dennis@xxxxxx" <dennis@xxxxxx-ass.net> wrote in message news:C612E3F3-EC18-4C68-ABA5-25F58726896A@xxxxxx Quote: > > > "guitardude" <guitardude@xxxxxx> wrote in message > news:OOSaFAqaIHA.5984@xxxxxx Quote: >> I have a western digital 320 gig external hard drive. I was surprised to >> find out that I couldn't use some of that space with ReadyBoost, or at >> least the ReadyBoost tab in the device properties says I cant. Its USB >> 2.0 and it definitely has enough space to support it, so why doesn't it? >> Thanks in advance for any help, >> guitardude > It is *far* too slow. > It would be better to just use a bigger swap file on an internal drive. |
My System Specs![]() |
| | #9 (permalink) |
| Guest | Re: ReadyBoost "guitardude" <guitardude@xxxxxx> wrote in message news:uPGmeM5aIHA.1132@xxxxxx Quote: > how do I change my swap file's size. what is the recommended size for best > performance when matched with 2 gigs of physical ram? > thanks, > guitardude is no reason to change. You will not make the system faster just able to run more programs without running out of memory. If performance is an issue and it is caused by use of the swap file the only cure is more RAM. |
My System Specs![]() |
| | #10 (permalink) |
| Guest | Re: ReadyBoost On Sat, 9 Feb 2008 21:14:55 -0600, "guitardude" <guitardude@xxxxxx> wrote: Quote: > how do I change my swap file's size. what is the recommended size for best > performance when matched with 2 gigs of physical ram? How much swap file you need depends on what apps you run and which of them run simultaneously. It's not as simple as some factor of how much RAM you have. The more RAM you have, the less you need swap file (except for dumps) and the more you run at once, the more you need swap file. You can usually save some disk space by reducing the swap file minimum below the Windows default, but in these days of cheap hard drives, the value of what you can save is tiny. So it's usually best for most people to leave the Windows defaults in place. -- Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience Please Reply to the Newsgroup |
My System Specs![]() |
![]() |
| Thread Tools | |
| |
Similar Threads | ||||
| Thread | Forum | |||
| ReadyBoost - how to set up PERFMON to monitor ReadyBoost activity | Vista General | |||
| ReadyBoost | Vista hardware & devices | |||
| ReadyBoost | Vista General | |||
| Readyboost...? | Vista General | |||
| ReadyBoost | Vista General | |||