this means going to msconfig via start/run and selecting the startup tab then you uncheck what you wish(be carefull you have to know what you are doing here some of that stuff your pc needs. make sure ALL unneeded programs are not running on startup. Note wise has a free disk cleaner as wellas a a registry cleaner that work great, they also have the paid versions. this includes defragging, antispyware sweeps(do not let the antispyware run all the time, it just slows down your pc), the program window washer(or something like it, to dump all unneeded files), a good registry cleaner(if you have never used one, the junk builds up in the registry from all the installs and uninstalls you have done ever, plus any pc problems that you ever had), consider running chkdsk R on your c drv(once a week or once a month). ![]() have and be using a pc maintenance routine. you should already be doing the following. It is not that you have to make the programs run faster, it is your pc that has to run faster. do you have and use a pc maintaince routine? pcs are just like cars, you have to maintain them to keep going at max speed and perfromance. suggest thst your slow pc problems lie elseware. in fact, i do not know when the program is even running. I use deskeeper 2009 pro premier and there is no penalty when it is in use. In many ways Unix has the legacy of NTFS to thank for the development of journalled filesystems like ext3 and ext4. The fears about corrupting your Unix system by not shutting it down properly never applied to NTFS. NTFS will live very happily in a GPT-partitioned disk with no practical boot size restrictions.įrom the very beginning NTFS was a very robust journalling file system. There are some size limitations on boot partitions, but those are limitations of the BIOS and the MBR partition scheme, not of NTFS. If you're referring to the idea that you don't need to split a single physical drive up into, for example, "C:" and "D:" partitions with ext3 or ext4, well - you don't need to do that with NTFS, either. Not sure what you mean by "don't need partitioning" but file systems, even those in Unix, live inside disk partitions, so every file system needs a disk that has at at least one partition on it. ![]() Compared to modern file systems like ext3 and ext4 which don't need partitioning, NTFS has run its course.
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