Recommended Posts

I have just found a site with some useful speed tweaks all displayed on one page for quick access.

It is the most useful page for tweaks I have come across.

http://www.pccallouts.co.uk/freetutorials.html

It covers 18 Windows XP Speed Tweaks.

They include:

1. Remove/Replace Windows Background image

2. Edit Boot.ini to disable GUI boot

3. Disk Cleanup

4. Disk Defragmenter

5. Visual Performance

6. Windows Explorer Performance

7. Applications Autorunning on Startup

8. Cleaning the Windows Registry

9. Remove viruses, trojans and spyware

10. Apply Windows updates

11. Disable performance counters

12. Optimize your internet connection

13. Remove windows fonts

14. Disabling indexing service

15. Turning off system restore

16. Speed up boot sequence

17. Disable unnecessary services

18. Setting manual IP addresses

Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/614953-18-windows-xp-speed-tweaks/
Share on other sites

I have just found a site with some useful speed tweaks all displayed on one page for quick access.

It is the most useful page for tweaks I have come across.

http://www.pccallouts.co.uk/freetutorials.html

It covers 18 Windows XP Speed Tweaks.

They include:

1. Remove/Replace Windows Background image

2. Edit Boot.ini to disable GUI boot

3. Disk Cleanup

4. Disk Defragmenter

5. Visual Performance

6. Windows Explorer Performance

7. Applications Autorunning on Startup

8. Cleaning the Windows Registry

9. Remove viruses, trojans and spyware

10. Apply Windows updates

11. Disable performance counters

12. Optimize your internet connection

13. Remove windows fonts

14. Disabling indexing service

15. Turning off system restore

16. Speed up boot sequence

17. Disable unnecessary services

18. Setting manual IP addresses

1. What are you running? A Pentium 1 with 64 Megs ram?

If your performance is crippled by such a low quality and simple image, I would look elsewhere for speed improvements.

2. How much time do you spend booting your system? The animated startup logo is a helpful screen that lets you know nothing bad has happened. This has no impact on actual system speed.

3.

Disk cleanup is a good idea, but isn't really a speed tweak.

4.

Disk defragmenting is a good tip.

5.

Turning down the visual in XP is more of a preferences thing than speed thing, unless your system is way too under powered anyway.

6.

This "tweak" may not apply in many situations, and may even be another personal preference tweak.

7.

I'm actually a big fan of "MSConfig -> Disable All". This is actually one of the best "speed tweaks" listed. It has the power to make system performance change like night and day. Unfortunately, it may also be one of the more confusing and possibly harmful tweaks.

8.

There has been a lot of talk on if cleaning your registry is a good thing. If there is some issue in the registry where a bad key is causing some sort of conflict and slow down, then cleaning it may help. In most other situations, cleaning out old keys will not give any speed increase.

9.

This one is silly. It should be done all the time. Those who allow their system to be overran with crap like this probably wont have the smarts needed to do anything else on the list.

10.

Another silly one. Windows should always be kept up to date. Anyone who skips this, again, doesn't have the smarts for anything else on the list.

11.

Performance counters shouldn't have any noticeable speed hit on the system. Disabling them may make troubleshooting something difficult later.

12.

Now here is a great way to break something. If you don't know how to keep your system clean of viruses and never run Windows Updates, I don't think messing with TCP/IP settings is the thing to do.

13.

Remove FONTS? What is this guide for? Windows 3.1 and Windows 9x??? Just like the "remove your wallpaper" option, this is a silly "tweak". If your system speed is being brought down by having too many fonts, you should look at upgrading your system. Unless you have 500 or more fonts, I wouldn't even worry about this.

14.

Turning off indexing is something I do anyway. This is somewhat of a tiny speed tweak, as it may be a useless feature to many people.

15.

Again, turning off System Restore is something I do anyway. I can recover from any error though. If you're someone who doesn't know how to handle malware or update Windows, you probably aren't someone who is good at recovering from system crashes or re-installations of Windows.

Yes, it may be a speed tweak to turn this off, but it may leave some people defenseless against fatal system issues.

I don't like System Restore, but I've lost count of how many times I've read about other people "rolling back" with it to get their system working again.

16.

Oh look, another boot tweak.

17.

Oh god, another "disable un-needed services" guide.

Those are there for a reason. You may not use them all, but you may run into an issue because one is disabled. Unless you KNOW what you are disabling, you shouldn't follow some random person's "guide" telling you to turn things off.

If your system is choking on basic Windows services, then you need to jump start your computer and get it out of the 1990s. Add some RAM.

18.

No, don't set your IP to static unless you know what you're doing. Issues with this pop up when you try to use an IP someone else is already using, or you have a different network setup than the person writing this "guide", or if your system is mobile and changes networks.

A system getting an IP takes about *zero* time. Windows 9x use to suffer from a 60-second time out, but nothing has had this issue since.

This is one of the crappiest "speed tweaks" I've seen.

If you follow this guide word for word, good luck to you. Just don't ask anyone else for help if something goes wrong.

  • 2 weeks later...

:D lmao at Xenomorph's comments.

As for the answer to your pc spec question.

I have a e6600, 320mb 8800gts, 2gb kingston value ram, 250gb sata 16mb hd, asus p5b mobo, lg 19inch widescreen

The reason for me to optimize xp is to play the latest games on my pc with the highest fps without having to upgrade.

Paid ?180 for a new graphics card and ?150 for e6600 in may 07 and now much better hardware is out for alot less + a bit skint.

Crysis only works at high fps on medium settings.

All other games call of duty 4, MOH airborne, need for speed prostreet, pro evo soccer 2008, elder scrolls oblivion and others work on max settings.

I can always overclock e6600 to 3.0ghz only prob is pc becomes noisy as i prefer the silence on an antec sonata II case with arctic freezer 7 fan.

Useless kingston value ram means that no overclocking over 3.0ghz as it runs very hot and not stable, will upgrade but not for a while yet.

This is where these tweaks were very useful for me in increasing pc performance without paying a penny.

Btw, the link for the site I posted seems to have changed for some odd reason.

It now contains 26 speed tweaks even better lol:

Just tried the nLite tweak and its amazing what you can mess around with.

http://www.pccallouts.co.uk/freexpspeedtweaks.html

  • 2 months later...

Well, I was playing around using a couple of those tips, however when I restarted, my desktop icons were out of order. When I fixed them and restarted, they were out of order again. How can I fix this? The only things I changed were in that link.

I believe this is all I changed:

-Disable performance counters

-Load menus faster

-Shutdown XP faster

-Optimize your internet connection

-Reduce Applications Autorunning on Startup

-Cleaning the Windows Registry

-Remove junk files and shrink registry

-Defragment Windows Page File (Don't believe this actually worked)

-Turning off system restore (Just shrunk the size)

There may have been more, but I believe thats all I changed.

  • 3 weeks later...
Well, I was playing around using a couple of those tips, however when I restarted, my desktop icons were out of order. When I fixed them and restarted, they were out of order again. How can I fix this? The only things I changed were in that link.

I believe this is all I changed:

-Disable performance counters

-Load menus faster

-Shutdown XP faster

-Optimize your internet connection

-Reduce Applications Autorunning on Startup

-Cleaning the Windows Registry

-Remove junk files and shrink registry

-Defragment Windows Page File (Don't believe this actually worked)

-Turning off system restore (Just shrunk the size)

There may have been more, but I believe thats all I changed.

do a google search for a desktop icon saving program, when you mess around with resolution and crap a lot they get out of order and it's annoying, but with a program i've seen before (can't think of name) you can save your desktop state or load it with 2 clicks. search it! =D

Speed up Windows XP boot time

One of the simplest and most easy ways to speed up Windows XP boot times is by slightly changing the parameters of prefetching. Windows XP is set to prefetch and cache both boot and application data on startup. By simply changing this to boot files only, you can speed up (sometimes significantly) the boot time for windows XP.

Step 1) Run regedit and navigate to HKLM->System->CurrentControlSet->Control->Session Manager->Memory Management->Prefetch Paramaters

image001.png

The entry we are concerned about is EnablePrefetcher (which is highlighted above). Notice that it is set to 3. This is standard for MOST default installs of Windows XP. The different settings for the prefetcher are as follows:

* 0 = Disabled

* 1 = Application Launch Prefetch

* 2 = Boot Prefetch

* 3 = Application and Boot Prefetch

For speed of booting, we want to set this parameter to 2. So double click the entry.

Change the Value data from 3 to 2 and click ok.

Step 2) Once you?ve done that, you should go clean out your prefetch folder. This is locate at *C:\windows\prefetch*

*note* My windows installation was on the C:\ drive, yours could be different.

Just select everything in this folder and delete it all. This clears all the old prefetch data that your computer had.

Step 3) Reboot your computer. *NOTE* You will probably not notice a faster boot up time the first time you reboot. In fact, it may even be slower. This is due to the fact that since you cleaned out your prefetch folder, so Windows has to effectively ?learn? what files to prefetch again. But subsequent reboots should be considerably faster.

Well, I was playing around using a couple of those tips, however when I restarted, my desktop icons were out of order. When I fixed them and restarted, they were out of order again. How can I fix this? The only things I changed were in that link.

I believe this is all I changed:

-Disable performance counters

-Load menus faster

-Shutdown XP faster

-Optimize your internet connection

-Reduce Applications Autorunning on Startup

-Cleaning the Windows Registry

-Remove junk files and shrink registry

-Defragment Windows Page File (Don't believe this actually worked)

-Turning off system restore (Just shrunk the size)

There may have been more, but I believe thats all I changed.

Right click on the desktop and you will see "Arrange Icons By --->"

changing the prefetch key is stupid as all it does is slow your app launch times,best to leave it alone.with vista you dont need to tweak it much(tune startups,turn off features you dont need)

  • 2 months later...
This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Here is how I fixed Windows 11 not booting after clean installation by Taras Buria Story time. A couple of weeks ago, I experienced a very odd thing with my computers. I was trying to reinstall Windows 11 on my primary device, and everything was going smoothly until the installer performed the first restart. After that, my computer entered the boot disk selection screen instead of continuing the setup process. Huh, that's odd, said I, and selected Windows Boot Manager only to see it fall back into the same screen right away. Then I tried booting from the USB drive with the same result—the PC kept returning to the boot device selection screen, and removing the drive would send my PC to UEFI, again, with no way to launch Windows 11. I fired up my spare laptop, which has been sitting unused for quite a while, to see if I am dealing with a defective USB drive. Nope, Windows 11 installed and started without issues. After trying another drive and checking all the possible settings in UEFI, I decided to try disabling Secure Boot. Lo and behold, Windows 11 started as it should have been in the first place, continued the setup process, and reached the initial setup screen. Victory! After I finished the setup and applied all updates, I re-enabled Secure Boot, and Windows 11 started without issues. Some time later, I tried reinstalling Windows 11 on my laptop only to experience similar issues, with UEFI claiming a Secure Boot violation. I checked whether the drive works on my main PC, and yes, it installed Windows 11 without errors. I scratched my head, went to UEFI, turned off Secure Boot, and installed Windows 11 without issues. After that, I enabled Secure Boot. Note: I used the official Media Creation Tool app for my USB drive. Also, UEFI was properly configured for Windows 11, including no Legacy Mode, a GPT-partitioned drive, and TPM and Secure Boot enabled. From my experience, if you are dealing with similar symptoms, I recommend two things: If you use old Windows 11 install media, create a new one with the latest Windows 11 release, especially if you know your PC already has the latest Secure Boot certificates. If you cannot create a new one, turn off Secure Boot, complete the installation, download all available updates, and then re-enable Secure Boot in UEFI. Note that you need to turn off Secure Boot after installing Windows 11. Otherwise, the installer won't run, claiming a hardware requirements mismatch. I believe the problem hides in Secure Boot certificates that expire this month. Microsoft is currently rolling out new certificates, and maybe a mismatch was causing these issues for both of my systems. I am out of my depth to make a definitive statement; this article is flagged as "Opinion," as I only share my experience and some tips on how to fix the problem. If some of you possess deeper knowledge and understanding of the situation, please share it in the comments. As for everyone else struggling with computers not booting after a clean install, the two steps above should get you out of the pickle.
    • I gave the tool a chance the other day to make a USB. An hour later it was stuck at 0% downloaded. I downloaded the official ISO, downloaded Rufus, and made the USB myself in 15 min.
    • <Moved to software discussion and support> I've got fond memories of Winamp. Changing the skins, the different visualisations etc. But now I just need a simple music player. MSN messenger would be another one, MSN Messenger Plus (I think?) offered so many different plugins. But again, it probably wouldn't work for me these days. And then there is miRC. i think it's still going these days, but lord i had fun with that back in the day. Now it's mostly stuff like Discord, WhatsApp group chats, Signal, Telegram... /me is showing his age...
    • ive always been fascinated by old software this is an old video player for windows from apple
  • Recent Achievements

    • Conversation Starter
      flexorcist earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • One Month Later
      AndreaB earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • One Month Later
      agatameier earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      agatameier earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Week One Done
      ssd21345 earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      518
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      198
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      147
    4. 4
      ATLien_0
      94
    5. 5
      Steven P.
      77
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!