Comments on: Can you defrag your registry?
Does a registry cleaner or defragger hold the same power as a disk defragger? Seth Rosenblatt takes an look at Auslogics, publisher of both kinds of programs, for an empirical evaluation.
Does a registry cleaner or defragger hold the same power as a disk defragger? Seth Rosenblatt takes an look at Auslogics, publisher of both kinds of programs, for an empirical evaluation.
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Those two applications keep my computer in a perfect performance condition.
I don't use them much, only when I experience that my computer is running a bit slower than usual.
These applications are a must have for every computer user.
As you install and remove programs, change settings, etc. you are creating registry entries. These bits and settings remain in your registry long after software is changed or removed.
They sit there, even if they are just empty folders. Problem is, your CPU is looking in those folders for information it needs to run every operation in the computer. 100 empty folders, 100 useless empty things to look in during every move your computer makes.
The speed you gain is not processor speed, or application speed. It is a reduction in the amount of time (in MS) that the computer takes to access the Windows Registry.
http://webmaster360.org/How-To/Win-XP-Tweaks-using-Regedit.html
But however, i have not yet found a good defragmenter since they have some sort of weird programming that you have no real control over them. e.g:you cannot manually choose where you would want the files to be on the disk's surface.
After defraging with this application, I sometimes get a slight sluggishness occur and freeze-ups have also result both upon start-up and while surfing, too. Luckily, on next startup, the problem seems to resolve itself, but you can't be sure it's always going to.
Two years or so ago, I was using another brand of registry defrag,
of which I can't recall the name. The first half dozen defraggings showed no apparent ill-effects then an unexpected slow-up occurred
which was so severe, I had to do a full recovery of the operating system. Sometime later, I used it again, being not quite sure if it really was it that caused the need for the last recovery. I soon found out it was when a second recovery was needed.
My advise: Use ANY registry defrag sparingly and with caution. An application called ERUNT, although an old piece of software, has an Optimizer included, but no defrag. I often use that with no ill-effects.
Of course, it's necessary to carefully study the names of the files and strings thrown up by the search each time, before deleting.
I offer these parameters for running fast:
1. Boot up time (no faster now than it was in the pentium I, II and III days with the released windows OS for that era. My laptop is a AMD turon 64x2 with 2 GB DDR RAM runing Vista premium...guess what I can still make a cup of coffee in the time it reboots to windows, and boot into windows (see below)
2. Boot in time, this has slowed waaaay down. Sure no your in windows but the start up is loading tons of un needed programs...most likely your antivirus is running an un-needed scan and all kinds of stupid things are launching such as windows up-date...
3. Program start up time - varies with the type of program, I would go with the time it takes to load Office pro program (word 2003/07, excel, powerpoint)
4. The benchmarking should be done with the Industry standard low, medium and high end desktop or laptop configurations offered by the big three HP, Dell, Levono (no an alienware box is not a industry standard SOHO user!!! darn geeks you serve no purpose to the general public showing off how much you can overclock).
Now lets roll that up into one metric called Fast. The fastest box i ever had was a Pentium III 333 with 128mb of ram running windows 95. Every office program just popped open in less than a second...the boot time was about 32 seconds....it was a general public box selling for about 1200 bucks at the time.
knowlageable user.
*** "install what you NEED everything else is hog feed" ***
- by martinex April 7, 2008 2:40 AM PDT
- Anyone who uses a program that changes their registry without first backing up said registry deserves whatever horrible thing happens to them.
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