Tuesday, January 4, 2011

How To Make A Slow Running Computer Much Faster Quickly And Easily

How To Make A Slow Running Computer Much Faster Quickly And Easily

Author: Ba Kiwanuka

Without a doubt today’s home PC is faster than ever, so much so that even the slowest brand new computer of today has more horsepower under its hood than all the computing power combined together that was used in running the Apollo Moon Mission! That said, your brand new superfast PC with time will inevitably become a snailing slow computer that will drive you up the wall. Here's why:

Whenever you use your computer, file pieces or file fragments are formed which eventually become dislodged and misplaced from one another. This process of fragmentation occurs because of the continuous and ongoing activity of the addition and the deletion of files on your hard drive whenever your computer is performing a task. Fragmentation ultimately reduces computer performance because processing resources must be allocated to what in effect becomes a seek-n-find operation.

Basically when a file is fragmented the computer must search the entire hard disk any time that file is opened in order to piece together all the various fragments of that file to make it complete. As you can imagine this is a time consuming and labor intensive process that makes a computer run slow and forces it to run and perform in a sluggish manner.

The Process Of Defragmenting

Defragmentation is the process whereby the various different parts of a file are arranged in a contiguous fashion so that the file fragments connect to one another in sequential order until the file is a complete unit once more. Arranging files in this manner speeds up an otherwise slow computer because now that the file fragments are arranged to form a whole the computer can access and retrieve that file so much faster from its hard drive or whichever disk has just been defragmented.

Windows Comes With A Basic Disk Defragmenting Tool That Does Little To Fix A Slow Computer

All windows operating systems come installed with a basic defragmenting tool, which although won't restore your slow computer to its former speedy self will help to improve performance. Getting to the inbuilt Windows defragment tool is quite easy. All you have to do is click on Start then go to Programs, find the Accessories tab (click on that) head to Systems Tools and finally you’ll get to the defragment tool. Windows' default defragmenting tool will be listed as Disk Defragmenter.

Whether you are using a third party disk defragmenter or the Windows inbuilt default tool, the process of basic defragmenting your drive is pretty much the same and couldn’t be simpler. Just choose whichever drive you wish to defragment (assuming you have more than 1 drive) then click “Defragment�. You can choose to analyze the disk first by clicking the “Analyze� button but this is pretty redundant since the defragmenting tool automatically goes through the process of analyzing before defragging anyway.

Windows XP Paging File

There is a hidden file on your computer called the Pagefile.sys which together with the physical amount of RAM installed on your system makes up the Virtual Memory:

Paging file + Physical RAM = Virtual Memory

The paging file is really a relic of the past and its purpose was to boost the amount of actual physical RAM available on any given computer system. You see back in the day when computers were equipped with a “whoppingâ€? 64â€"128 megabytes (MB) of RAM, as software applications became more advanced and at the same time more resource hungry, an alternative means was needed to accommodate the required amount of RAM, until such time that hardware manufactures caught up and produced greater capacity modules of RAM.

RAM, by the way stands for, Random Access Memory and is a hardware component found in your computer as memory modules. These days however, RAM really isn’t too much of an issue especially on high-end systems that can easily accommodate 16G or more of RAM. Having said that though, for the average PC owner the prudent management of RAM is still an issue, especially when one takes into account such factors as insatiable operating systems like Windows Vista (need a minimum of 1.5 gigabytes of RAM for Vista to perform at a basic tolerable level) and other resource ravenous software that is the norm of modern day computing.

Anyway back to that dinosaur of yesteryear known as the Paging File; for some reason or other Windows by default still allocates a figure of 1.5 times the physical amount of RAM to the Paging File. In other words:

Physical RAM x 1.5 = Paging File (Virtual Memory)

So in a system such which has 4 gigs of physical RAM installed, the Paging File would take up a shattering 6 gigs of RAM! And that is not the only problem related to the Paging File here’s the kicker:

By Default The Paging File Cannot Be Defragmented!

The Paging File despite its designation of “virtual memory� is nothing more than reserved hard drive space to which data is written to and retrieved periodically. By default the paging file is stored on the boot partition of windows which means that the paging file is housed in that portion of Windows that contains the operating system and its respective support folders. There is a huge problem with this situation and that is:

When the Paging File and Operating System are located on the same drive partition simultaneous access to both systems is impossible and access to the one must by necessity await completion of access to the other. This process naturally makes for a very slow computer.

Two Ways To Fix The Paging File Problem And Make Your Slow Computer Faster

1. The Hard Way To Speed Up Your Slow Running Computer

Luckily though there is a way round this bottle-neck situation; by moving the Paging File to a different partition Windows will then be able to handle I/O (input/output) requests faster because the relocation of the Paging File ensures a less competitive environment for reading and writing requests. However do note though that if you completely move the Paging File from the boot partition Windows will be unable to create a dump file (Memory.dmp) with which to write debugging information when a kernel mode Stop Error message occurs.

The way to bypass such an eventuality is to create a paging file that is stored on the boot partition and another paging file that is located on a separate partition. Windows by design will access the paging file located on the non-boot partition first before looking to the paging file housed on the boot partition.

2. The Easy Way To Speed Up Your Slow Running Computer

As you can see the above method is a very complicated and time consuming way to fix a slow computer! Surely there must be an easier and quicker way? Well actually thankfully there is. Click the link below to find out how:

Make Computer Faster

Article Source: http://www.articlealley.com/article_901462_10.html

About the Author: Ba Kiwanuka is the webmaster of http://www.internetbusinessmart.com

http://www.internetbusinessmart.com

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