Click
Here
for more articles |
|
|
What's
the point for computer optimization? |
by:
Ted
Peterson |
I
am sure you've heard a lot of things about
computer optimization. Everywhere you look
you see ads that invite you to "boost your
performance" or "improve your computer".
So, what's the idea? Is anything true about
it? Does your computer really need optimization?
Unfortunately, it does. There are many weak
zones in Windows operating system. Here
are a few of them:
- registry
- hardware management
- internet connection
Registries are Windows's internal database.
All sort of information are stored there,
from hardware and drivers info to applications'
settings. After each removal of any device,
like a printer or video card, pieces of
information remain there. The biggest problem
is when you uninstall a program. Unfortunately,
many applications fail to erase all their
data on removal. A solution for this is
to run "regedit" and manually search for
all references to the program and erase
them.
By hardware management I mean memory and
hard-disk management. As you know, each
program uses some of your computer's memory.
Memory allocation is determined by how much
the program needs and, of course, if the
resource is available. When the application
stops, the used blocks of memory should
be freed. But this is not happening all
the time. So, when a new programs requests
memory to run, your computer will slow down
because it will compete with other applications
for the remaining resources.
The same situation appears when you remove
files from your computer. They are not really
erased. They remain on your hard-disk and
affect other files that you want to read
or write. It's the same principle as described
above regarding memory usage. To avoid problems
you should use at least once a month a hard-disk
defragmenter, in order to clean remaining
pieces of information.
Because so many people use the Internet
today, internet speed has become very important.
I am talking about download speed and browsing
speed. Actually it's the same concept. When
you browse a webpage, you computer creates
by default a channel with the page's server
and starts downloading it. Download speed
is of course given first of all by your
internet subscription, but there is something
that affects it too. The connection channel
can be single threaded or multi threaded.
As I said that channel is by default single
threaded. What your computer should do is
to break the downloaded file (image, text,
archive, etc) into several smaller parts,
and create a download channel for each of
them. After they are all downloaded it should,
of course, rebuild the source. That is what
all download accelerators do.
Those are only a few ideas why your computer
needs optimization. Registry tweaking, memory
flushing, hard-disk defragmenters and an
accelerated Internet connection would speedup
your activity because you won't have to
loose so much time waiting...
You can find several software releases that
would do the job on CoreDownload, a software
archive with over 23.000 titles to choose
from.
About the author:
Ted Peterson writes for CoreDownload
- Download essential games and utilities.
Purchase online having up to 20%
discount of the initial price for popular
titles like
Speedupmypc.
Circulated by Bandoni
Media
|
|