Recommended Posts

I have gave Vista a few tries but have kept booting into XP because of my dissapointment in the bloatage. I was thinking of giving it another shot, and I was wondering what steps I could take to slim it down. Here are the specs:

Laptop w/Intel Centrino

1.6GHz Pentium M

Mobility ATI Radeon 9000 Video

2GB DDR333 RAM

120GB OS Hard Drive (multiboot)

250GB Data Hard Drive

Intel Pro/Set Wireless 2200BG

Broadcom 440x Gigabit Network Adapter

I already disabled the Aero Glass and use the classic Windows 2000 look (my preference). However, it seems that Aero Glass and the classic look run at the same speed and the only difference is the appearance. What else can I do to try to speed things up?

UPDATE(S): While there has been many helpful posts, This was the most useful to me right off the bat:

You can always try vLite but that would require a new installation of Vista.

> vLite is a very cool utility to avoid installing things you don't want in the first place. A must have for minimalists such as myself.

You might have problems installing SP1 after using vLite to remove components. A better approach is to integrate SP1 into the installation first. Go to Microsoft and download the ~350MB SP1 setup file. Once the integration completes, go back and remove things you don't want.

NOTE: Don't integrate SP1 and remove/add components at the same time. vLite will give you a similar warning when you choose the integration method.

In order to slipstream SP1 into a Gold image, make sure you are running vLite under Windows Vista or Windows 2008. I tried slipstreaming a Vista Image using vLite in Windows XP, and it failed. I still, was however able to create a minimal Vista Gold install.

And here are some pretty decent guides, the blackviper one being my favorite and the notebook one also useful:

Edited by dmd3x
Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/650400-minimal-windows-vista/
Share on other sites

You can always try vLite but that would require a new installation of Vista.

Below are some sites that may help:

http://www.speedyvista.com/services.html

http://www.howtogeek.com/tag/windows-vista/

http://www.blackviper.com/WinVista/servicecfg.htm

Also this one on Notebooks:

http://forum.notebookreview.com/showthread.php?t=166532

Edited by Gary7

Vlite can get you a minimal system, but as stated above, you will have to reinstall Vista to use it (although you could do some testing with VMware or VirtualPC). I have tried Vlite in the past but in the end I have decided to just go with the system as shipped by Microsoft.

I have tried nLite, dunno much about vLite... All I can say is that if you don't have an idea as to what you are doing, your installation is going to be messed up... Sometimes even minute changes might cause unforeseen problems... So I suggest you install Vista as it is, it is more [irony]stable[/irony] that way...

You can always try vLite but that would require a new installation of Vista.

Not a problem at all, I am a frequent reformatter. (Almost to the point where it is a problem haha)

I really like this program from looking at the screenshots, and they have one for XP too... I'll have to give it a try. Nice suggestion! This way I can remove options before I even install instead of having to do a cleanup afterwards. Me like :D

Both themes, Windows Classic and Windows Aero, use little to no CPU performance because of their methods of activity. Windows Classic is the minimal configuration of appearance and is so "lightweight" the CPU doesn't even feel it (Applies to only XP and Vista). But Windows Aero is mostly used by the GPU relieving all stress and use of the CPU. Hence the similar performance.

The only way Aero could make your computer lag is if you had a sucky video card; it would cause Aero to run on the CPU rather than the GPU.

Honestly the jump from DDR400 to DDR333 is so not worth the money. If you follow blackvipers, guide, you can get Windows to use around 280MB of RAM, which is around XP territory.

Your laptop has similar specs to my laptop, and I ran Vista just fine.

I have a Turion ML-32 1.8GHz

1.5GB DDR 333 RAM

60GB 5400RPM Drive

ATI X200m

Does your processor haves a single core or dual core? If it's a single core then 1.6 GHz is not good enough. Check out your "Windows Experience Index" and post the full results here. The full results are below. :)

post-132753-1216733800_thumb.jpg

Does your processor haves a single core or dual core? If it's a single core then 1.6 GHz is not good enough. Check out your "Windows Experience Index" and post the full results here. The full results are below. :)

Pentium M is a single core processor and welcome to the days of 2000. You're thinking of plain processor speed is wrong. It's all about how efficient the processor is and the Pentium M was a good laptop processor in its time.

I have a Pentium M 2.0GHz w/ 2GB DDR2 533 memory and find Vista usable but disappointingly slow compared to the XP installation that I upgrade from. I have always dual booted the laptop and for the past two months, have been using Ubuntu about 95% of the time. I do use Vista when on the battery because power management is better, my 7800GTX GO sucks the battery dry under Linux too quickly.

This is a very nice reference.

Does your processor haves a single core or dual core? If it's a single core then 1.6 GHz is not good enough. Check out your "Windows Experience Index" and post the full results here. The full results are below. :)

I'll run that and post it as soon as I get a chance. Currently I'm going to reformat and use that vLite, do the tweaking and run that test. :yes:

Also, is it just me or does that Windows Experience Index thing look kind of cheesy? lol

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

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Windows 11 KB5094126, KB5093998 bugging out Office apps but it may not be Microsoft's fault by Sayan Sen Microsoft last week released Windows 11 KB5094126 and KB5093998 as the latest Patch Tuesday updates. Following that the company also published the accompanying dynamic updates under KB5094149, KB5095971, and KB5094156. Although the tech giant did not acknowledge any major problems, some users online reported various issues ranging from OneDrive and Dropbox access problems, BitLocker recovery lockouts, to blue screens and BSODs. You can read about them in this dedicated piece. While there is still no confirmation about those problems from Microsoft the company has admitted to another bug which we did not report on. The tech giant has confirmed it has received reports of an issue in which certain third-party applications may be unable to launch Microsoft Office apps or open Office documents after installing the Patch Tuesday. This affects both Windows 11 as well as Windows 10. The company says the problem impacts a subset of applications that rely on OLE (Object Linking and Embedding) automation to communicate with Microsoft Office programs. According to Microsoft, affected scenarios involve third-party software attempting to open Office applications or documents from within their own interface. In such cases, the Office program may fail to launch altogether, or the requested document may not open. Oddly there may not be any error message, which probably makes the issue difficult to diagnose. The bug affects several Office products, including Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Access, and other apps in the Microsoft Office suite when they are launched through the affected software. These include tax and accounting software such as CCH Engagement and Workpaper Manager, dental practice management solutions like Dentrix and Softdent, as well as the popular research and reference management tool Zotero. Microsoft adds that other applications using similar Office integration methods could also experience the same problematic behavior. To understand the issue it is important to look at OLE, the Microsoft technology involved. OLE allows different applications to work together and share data, while its Automation feature lets one program control another. Thus this enables third-party software to launch Microsoft Office apps, open documents, and perform tasks automatically without requiring users to switch between programs. Because many accounting, healthcare, research, and business applications rely on OLE automation to interact with Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and other Office apps, any disruption can break those workflows. As a result, affected software may be unable to open Office documents or launch Office applications even though the programs themselves continue to work normally. At the moment the company has not provided a permanent fix though it has confirmed that engineers are actively working on a resolution, which will be delivered through a future Windows update. As such additional details will be shared once more information becomes available. In the meantime, Microsoft recommends a simple workaround for affected users whic is to open the Office application or document directly rather than launching it through the third-party program. For enterprise customers and organizations managing larger deployments, Microsoft says an additional mitigation is available. Admins experiencing the problem on their managed devices are advised to contact Microsoft Support for business to obtain and apply the workaround.
    • It saddens me when cars are such dull colours now. Mine is bright metallic blue and I absolutely adore it for standing out in contrast to that depressing backdrop of traffic.
    • Sparkle 2.20.0 by Razvan Serea Sparkle is a free, open-source Windows optimization tool designed to make your PC faster, cleaner, and more private. With Sparkle, you can easily debloat Windows by removing unnecessary apps and services, disable Microsoft tracking to enhance privacy, and apply performance tweaks to boost speed. Its cleaner removes junk and temporary files, while every change is safe and fully reversible. Sparkle also features a modern, user-friendly interface with automatic updates, making system maintenance simple. Explore over 39 tweaks, from disabling telemetry and hibernation to optimizing network and game settings, all aimed at customizing and enhancing your Windows experience. Sparkle supports Windows 10 and 11. Sparkle 2.20.0 changelog: Debloat Tweak has animated border New homepage loading UI New Tweak Modal (Markdown Supported) Refactored GPU Detection Added Tests with vitest Added foobar2000 to apps Added Localsend to apps Updated Modal Styles Added styles for disabled inputs Added Animated Border to debloat-windows tweak Bumped dependencies Refactor System info logic for speed Tweak info modals now support Markdown Added Clear System info cache to settings Redesigned Home Page Loading UI Changed Some Icons around the app Download: Sparkle 2.20.0 | Portable | ~100.0 MB (Open Source) Links: Sparkle Website | Github | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • lol it was a typo, fixed! haha imagine an actual 4TB Gen4 NVMe for $40 in 2026
    • Get over it, has nothing to do with my point.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Reacting Well
      Dys Topia earned a badge
      Reacting Well
    • Conversation Starter
      NovaEdgeX earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • One Year In
      Console General earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Week One Done
      Twozo Technologies earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • One Month Later
      Twozo Technologies earned a badge
      One Month Later
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      517
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      184
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      106
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      88
    5. 5
      ATLien_0
      68
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!