50 Ways To Make Your PC Faster

Posted by Narender Singh | 2:02 PM | , | 0 comments »



If your system is slow and you don’t have the cash to spend on upgrades, we’ve got the answer: tweak it until it flies!

The road to a faster PC starts by properly optimising your hardware. While some of these procedures can be risky, they can also prove very effective, often delivering direct and noticeable performance gains in every area of your system.

Update the BIOS

Upgrading your PC’s BIOS, or firmware in other devices like the router, could be a quick way to improve performance, fix bugs and even add new features. Look for the current BIOS version number on your boot screen or in the BIOS set-up program and then visit the manufacturer’s site to check for recent upgrades.

Disable unwanted devices

Speed up the boot process by turning off motherboard devices that you’re not using, such as integrated sound, graphics, extra network ports and so on. Look for a BIOS set-up menu called something like Integrated Peripherals to find the options that you need. Once Windows starts, launch Device Manager (‘devmgmt.msc’), locate any remaining unwanted devices, right-click them and select ‘Disable’ to save more resources. Be careful, though – disable the wrong device and you’re likely to find that your PC won’t be able to reboot. If you’re in any doubt about what a service does, look it up on the internet or leave it well alone.

Kick-start your PC

Optimising your BIOS settings will make for a quicker boot. Turn off the extended memory test, since it’s useless, then turn on a QuickBoot or FastBoot mode (the names may vary) for a little extra speed. Next, browse your BIOS set-up program looking for the boot order settings (often found under a Boot or ‘Startup | Boot’ menu), which is a list that determines where your system looks for bootable devices. Make sure that your hard drive comes right at the top of the list to avoid your system wasting time checking other devices. If you need to boot from CD later on (typically to install a new operating system or run a Live CD), you can temporarily change it back.

Get rid of USB checks

If you leave a USB drive connected to your PC and it appears in the boot order before your hard drive, then your PC will give the drive some time to initialise before checking whether it’s bootable. In some BIOSes this time is called the USB Mass Storage Delay, and it can be determined by you. If you never boot from a USB drive then set this to the lowest available figure to minimise any delay. If you find that you need to boot from a USB device in the future, simply increase the figure again.

Overclock the CPU


Overclocking your CPU – or running it faster than its rated speed – can get you 10 to 20 per cent more performance for a few minutes’ work. There are risks, though. More speed means more heat and maybe more voltage too.
You’ll use more power, and components will have a greater chance of failing – so don’t try this unless you’re willing to accept the risks of doing so. Assuming you are, launch your BIOS set-up program and look for the overclocking settings (try the Advanced menu). Exactly what’s available depends on your hardware, but in principle increase your CPU and memory frequencies just a little. Boot your system and stress-test it with tools such as memtest86+ and OCCT to confirm that all is well. If it is, increase the frequencies a little more, and see what happens; if not, reduce the frequencies or increase the voltages (VCore, memory voltage), which should allow you to run a little faster (although doing this also risks burning out your components). Don’t do anything until you know what’s appropriate for your hardware, though. The Extreme Overclocking forum is a great place to find out more.

Safely overclock the CPU

If you’ve got an Intel Core 2 Duo or Core i7 CPU, check your BIOS for a setting like ‘Intel Dynamic Acceleration’ or ‘Turbo Mode’, and ensure it’s turned on. This handy setting will automatically overclock one core while shutting off the others, improving single-threaded performance. If you’re already overclocking, though, this setting stands a good chance of locking up your PC. Disable it and you may be able to push things just a little bit further.

Clean your laptop fan

Over time, the fans and vents on a laptop will become covered with dust, hairs and assorted gunk. The system then runs hotter, so your fan is on for longer and battery life falls. Worse still, your CPU speeds may be throttled to try and reduce the temperature. It’s a very good idea to open the case and carefully clean away any dust to make sure that the airflow is unobstructed.

Speed up graphics

Overclocking your graphics card can give games a little extra zip. How you get to the right settings will vary, but on our test PC, you right-click the desktop, select ‘Nvidia Control Panel | Adjust GPU settings’ and choose ‘Custom clock frequencies’ to find the ‘Core bus and memory bus’ figures. Increase them just a little to give more speed. After that, it’s much like overclocking your CPU: test that everything is OK, increase the clock rate again if it is, wind the settings back a little if your PC crashes and repeat until your system is stable. You can read more on ATI and Nvidia tweaks at TweakGuides.

Safely speed up graphics

Some BIOSes offer very basic PCI Express graphics card overclocking with a setting called ‘PEG link mode’. If you don’t intend to try more intensive overclocking, set this to its highest setting (usually ‘Faster’) and you should see a little extra speed.

Optimise the RAM

It takes time to access your RAM, but you can minimise this delay by playing around with the BIOS memory timings. There’s normally a timing entry set to ‘By SPD’, which means that your system uses the default timing values set by your RAM. Set this to ‘Disabled’ or ‘User defined’ and you can choose your own timings. Look for ‘CAS Latency’, say, reduce it by one setting, reboot and test that your system is working correctly. Repeat until your PC becomes unstable, then increase the value by one and move on to something else (check your BIOS documentation for more). Crashes here could stop your PC booting at all, even into the BIOS, so make sure that you know how to reset your BIOS to its default settings before you start messing around with any values.

Edit the BIOS

If your Nvidia drivers are proving unhelpful, then there is another way to ramp up your graphics performance – edit the BIOS directly. Of course, this is also the quickest way to trash your card altogether. Don’t try this unless you’re willing to take the risk. To do it, download a copy of Nibitor and then run it. Click ‘Tools | Read BIOS | Select device’, choose your graphics card and click ‘OK’, then click ‘Tools | Read BIOS | Read into Nibitor’ to start experimenting. Annoyed that you can’t change the shader clock in the driver? Just click the Clockrates tab and change it to whatever you like. Tweak the other settings, click ‘File | Save’ and then use a tool like NVFlash to update your card. See www.mvktech.net for more detailed instructions.

Stop network throttling

Windows Vista limits network transfers when you’re playing multimedia files to stop your music or video skipping. Great idea, but it can reduce performance on some high-speed network connections. To fix this, go to ‘HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Multimedia\SystemProfile’ and create a new DWORD value called ‘NetworkThrottlingIndexValue’. Set this to values between one and 70 (10 is the default, higher values mean less throttling) or ‘FFFFFFFF’ to disable throttling completely.


Turbocharge GMA

Many laptops use Intel’s Graphics Media Accelerator (GMA) video chipset, which is too slow for most games or other graphics-intensive packages. Some low-voltage GMA chipsets are drastically underclocked, though, and are able to perform far better than the default settings suggest. GMABooster (www.gmabooster.com) takes advantage of this to increase your GMA clock rate by x2.4, without voltage changes or affecting system stability.

Disable Acoustic mode

Some BIOSes contain a setting that makes your hard drive run more quietly. This sounds great, but unfortunately it negatively affects performance. If you’re more concerned with increasing your system’s speed than reducing the amount of noise it makes, check your BIOS program for a setting like ‘HDD Acoustic mode’ (it’s in the Performance section on Dell desktops, for example) and make sure that it’s set to ‘Performance’ rather than ‘Quiet’.

Enlarge the cache

Windows Vista stores your hard drive writes in a cache. This helps it to write data more efficiently and improves performance. To run faster still, launch ‘devmgmt.msc’, expand the Disk Drives section, right-click your drive, select ‘Properties | Policies’ and check ‘Enable advanced performance’. Windows now uses a larger cache and writes from it less often, improving performance but also increasing the risk of data loss if the drive loses power.

Use ReadyBoost (or not)

Windows Vista can use high-speed USB flash drives to cache data and hopefully improve performance. To try it out, plug in a USB device and then confirm that you’d like to use it with ReadyBoost if you’re asked. If you’re not, go to Computer, right-click the device and select ‘Properties’. If the feature can be used, there will be a ReadyBoost tab; click this, select ‘Use this device’, choose the space that you’d like to give to Windows and click ‘OK’. Alternatively, if you have no interest in using ReadyBoost, turn it off to save a few system resources. To do this, launch ‘services.msc’, double-click ReadyBoost, click ‘Stop’ and set ‘Startup type’ to ‘Disabled’.

Avoid Wi-Fi interference

Poor wireless network performance is sometimes down to interference, perhaps because your neighbours are also running a Wi-Fi network on the same channel. To find out if this is happening, run a network detector like Inssider or Vistumbler to see what’s going on. If you find that your neighbours already have wireless kit working on channel 11 (a common default) then switch your kit to channel six, say, to see a real performance boost.

Try CompactFlash cards

They’re more expensive and less portable than USB flash drives, but CompactFlash cards can be much faster to use. If your system has an internal reader (so not one connected via USB) then give one a go; we tested the SanDisk Extreme IV CompactFlash card and found that it delivered speeds of over 40MB/s, more than twice what you’ll see with many USB drives. It also worked with ReadyBoost on our PC and delivered a noticeable improvement in performance.

Reformat your USB drive

If you must stick with USB drives instead of switching to CompactFlash cards, make sure that they’re formatted using the best filesystem. NTFS delivers the worst performance, so avoid it like the plague. FAT32 is better, but if you only need to use the drive on Vista systems then use exFAT for the best speeds. To reformat your USB drive, right-click on it, select ‘Format’ and then choose either ‘FAT32’ or ‘exFAT’ in the File System list. See TestFreaks for some benchmark figures.

Up the DRDY timing

The BIOS DRDY (Device Ready) timing setting configures how quickly IDE or SATA devices will become available after they’ve completed their existing commands. Changing this setting to its highest possible option (which is usually ‘Optimise’) will improve system performance a little, but it could also result in a crash or even data loss. As always with potentially dangerous tweaks, experiment with it at your own risk.

Streamline PC startup

Your PC will boot more quickly if you give it less work to do during the start-up process. Remove discs from your DVD drives and Windows won’t wait while they spin up. Unplug USB devices that you won’t be using for a while, and your system won’t load drivers unnecessarily. Finally, use Autoruns to display and strictly limit the number of programs that launch when Windows starts, and Startup Delayer to postpone the launch of non-critical start-up programs for a minute or two, letting your PC focus on booting up instead of running apps.

Disable services

Save your system resources by disabling unnecessary services. If you have Windows Vista and don’t use Media Center, for instance, then launch ‘services.msc,’ double-click the Windows Media Center Extender, Receiver and Scheduler services and set their Startup Type to ‘Disabled’. Black Viper’s website has more. Vista users can also delay the launch of non-critical services, which can help your PC to start a little faster. To try this out, launch services.msc, double-click something you won’t need immediately and set its Startup Type to ‘Automatic (delayed start)’. Now reboot to see if it makes a noticeable change.

Decrease waiting time

If your PC has two or more operating systems then you’ll see a boot menu when it starts. To decrease the amount of time it waits before choosing the default setting, right-click Computer, select ‘Properties | Advanced system settings | Startup and recovery settings’, choose your default OS and set the ‘Time to display list of operating systems’ to something like 10 seconds.

Log in automatically

If you’re the only person who uses your PC, you can save time by logging in automatically. Be aware that this does introduce a security risk, however, as anyone with access to your system can do the same thing. Launch the command ‘control userpasswords2’, uncheck ‘Users must enter a user name and password’, click ‘OK’, enter the log-on user name and password if you’re prompted and click ‘OK’ again to enable automatic login.

Browse the Event Viewer

Windows Vista analyses every boot and shutdown, then records any programs that are slowing you down. To have a look for yourself, launch ‘eventvwr.msc’, expand ‘Applications and services logs | Microsoft | Windows | Diagnostics – performance | Operational’, and click on the ‘Warning’, ‘Error’ and ‘Critical’ events. Sometimes Vista gets this wrong, but if the same name keeps coming up then remove, update or reinstall the app to speed up your PC.

Prioritise programs

If you’re running lots of programs simultaneously but one is particularly important, you can make the CPU give it a high priority. To do so, press [CTRL]+[Shift]+[Esc] to launch Task Manager, right-click the app and select ‘Go to process’. Then right-click the process, select ‘Set priority | Above normal’, and it may now get more CPU time. Alternatively, set a resource-hogging app to ‘Below normal’ priority and other programs should become faster. Don’t tweak critical or system processes, though, or your PC may crash.

Recover Vista resources

If you don’t use the sidebar then right-click it, select ‘Properties’ and clear ‘Start Sidebar’ to prevent it loading in future. If you’ve installed your own antivirus software then you don’t need Windows Defender. Launch Defender; click ‘Tools | Options’, scroll down to ‘Administrator options’ and deselect the ‘Use Windows Defender’ box. You can also either turn off Aero to save a big chunk of RAM, or optimise it by right-clicking Computer, selecting ‘Properties | Advanced | Performance settings’ and choosing ‘Adjust for best performance’. The indexing service is useful, helping you find files and folders at speed, and it only runs when your PC is idle. Still, some say turning it off makes a real performance difference. If you rarely use the search function then launch ‘services.msc’, double-click Windows Search, click ‘Stop’ and set Startup Type to ‘Disabled’ to turn it off.

Replace Windows search

If you have turned Windows searching off, replace it with the utility Everything. This runs far more quickly, and it builds its database from the NTFS Master File Table, so no disk crawling is required. It only works with NTFS though, and can’t search the contents of files. If your search problems are with Outlook, take a look at Xobni, which the authors say is up to 50 times faster than the default Windows keyword search.

Copy more quickly

If Windows takes forever to copy files, use TeraCopy or FastCopy instead. These apps deliver better performance and handy extras like the ability to pause the copy process. Use Fling to schedule network or FTP transfers to take place when you’re not around.

Use speedy DNS servers

When you enter a domain name into your browser, is has to be resolved into an IP address by your ISP’s DNS server. If this is overloaded then there will always be a browsing delay. Fortunately, OpenDNS has fast alternative DNS servers that you can use for free. To try OpenDNS, launch ‘NCPA.CPL’, right-click your internet connection and select ‘Properties’. Click ‘Internet Protocol (TCP/IP)’ and hit ‘Properties’ (use ‘v4’ on Vista), then choose ‘Use the following DNS server addresses’ and enter ‘208.67.222.222’ in the ‘Preferred’ and ‘208.67.220.220’ in the ‘Alternate’ boxes.

Put your PC to sleep

If you have Vista, choose ‘Sleep’ rather than ‘Shutdown’ to save some time the next time you want to use your machine. Windows saves the state of your PC rather than closing it, which means it turns off (and reboots later) far more quickly. Or at least that’s the plan. If Sleep won’t work for you then it’s probably a driver problem. Check the Event Log to see what’s going wrong.

Reduce task switching

Regular editions of Windows switch rapidly from one program to another, ensuring a responsive user interface. But each task switch is an overhead, wasting CPU time. If you don’t need a highly responsive interface – you’re using Microsoft Office rather than playing 3D games, say – then giving each app more CPU time before moving to the next will cut task switching, making your PC more efficient. Right-click Computer, select ‘Properties | Advanced system settings | Performance settings | Advanced’ and select ‘Adjust for best performance of the background services’. Restore the normal setting if apps seem less responsive.

Clean up your disk

Removing junk from your drive can improve performance, even if it still has hundreds of gigabytes of free space. Uninstall unwanted programs with Windows or Revo Uninstaller. Likewise, stubborn security programs can be expunged using AppRemover. Next, try Windows Disk Cleanup or CCleaner to remove redundant files. Manually browse the ‘Program Files’ and ‘Windows\Temp’ folders for unnecessary files and folders (only delete what you’re sure is safe to go.) Finally, click ‘Start’ (then ‘Run’ if you’re using XP or earlier), type ‘%TEMP%’ and hit [Enter] to inspect and clear your User Temporary Files folder.

Move your paging file

Relocate the Windows paging file to a second physical drive (not a partition) different to the one that your applications are on to enable your PC to read and write to both simultaneously. This will speed things up noticeably. To do this, right-click Computer, select ‘Properties’ and click ‘Advanced [System Settings] | Performance settings | Advanced | Change’. Clear ‘Automatically manage paging file’,click your current drive, select ‘No paging file’ and then ‘Set’. Next, select the drive you want to use for the paging file, select ‘System managed size’, click ‘Set’, then ‘OK’ and reboot to see the results.

Accelerate Explorer

By default Windows XP regularly scans for new network printers and folders, adding anything it finds to My Network Places or the Printers folder. But if you rarely access network resources then this just slows you down. Click ‘Start | Control Panel | Appearances and themes | Folder options | View’, and clear ‘Automatically search for network folders and printers’ to stop it doing so.

Remove fonts

Most PCs accumulate fonts over time, reducing performance as your system spends time processing them. It’s a good idea to remove fonts you never use, as long as you’re careful – deleting important fonts can have all kinds of strange effects. Opt for the odd script, foreign or symbol fonts first. If in doubt leave it alone, and copy all your fonts to a back-up folder first so that they’re easily reinstalled.

Defrag thoroughly

The regular Windows defrag tool can’t defragment files that are open for exclusive access, which means that your paging and Registry files remain untouched. Fortunately there’s a free tool that can help. PageDefrag runs during the boot process and can defragment these system files without any trouble. It’s also worth trying a commercial app. PerfectDisk delivers the best results in our experience – get the 30-day trial and see how it works for you.

Go for speed over power

Windows Vista’s power options can turn off many optimisations in its effort to save energy, so if you prefer speed then it’s important to confirm you’re set up correctly. Click ‘Control Panel | System and maintenance | Power options’ and make sure you’re using the High Performance plan. Next, click the ‘Change plan settings’ link under ‘High performance’ to make sure that you’re using the fastest option for each setting.

Speed up the Start menu

Make Windows open menus more quickly with a quick Registry change. Just go to ‘HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Control Panel\Desktop’, double-click ‘MenuShowDelay’ and change it from the default 400 (milliseconds) to something smaller: 100ms works for us. Restart Windows to see the results.

Tune NTFS

If you don’t use old 16-bit software, launch REGEDIT and browse to ‘HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\FileSystem’, then set ‘NtfsDisable8 dot3NameCreation’ to 1. Windows will no longer create DOS-style shortened versions of file names, speeding up file creation. Set ‘Ntfs DisableLastAccessUpdate’ to 1 and Windows won’t update the Last Access date on a folder when you view it, delivering a small boost to drive performance. These options can break older software, so test your PC thoroughly afterwards.

Optimise Firefox

Firefox stores its data in self-contained SQLite databases, and these can be compacted in order to recover a little performance. You could do this by downloading the command-line tool Sqlite3 and then using the command ‘for %i in (*.sqlite) do @echo VACUUM; | sqlite3 %i’ to compact all SQLite files in the current folder. However, it’s much easier to install the SQLite Manager Firefox add-on. After you’ve done this, navigate to ‘Tools | SQLite Manager | Database | Connect database’ and browse to one of the large ‘.sqlite’ files in your Mozilla profile. Note its current size, click ‘Database | Compact database’, and check the size again – our ‘urlclassifier3.sqlite’ database dropped by 40MB.

Speed up iTunes

Help iTunes run a little faster by disabling features that you don’t use. If you don’t ever look at the Genius recommendations, click ‘Store | Turn off Genius’ to give a small performance boost. If you’re not on a large network or don’t want to share your library, click ‘Edit | Preferences | Sharing’ and turn off ‘Look for shared libraries’ and ‘Share my library’. If you don’t use Apple TV, click the Apple TV tab and clear ‘Look for Apple TVs’. Finally, click the Devices tab and clear any unnecessary ‘Look for...’ options. Large libraries are the main reason for poor iTunes performance. Click ‘Music’ in the Library section, then hold down [Shift] and choose ‘File | Show exact duplicates’ to look for multiple copies of songs. Delete any you don’t need and then browse the library to remove other songs you don’t play any more.

Install only what you need

If you normally select the ‘Complete’ option when you install a program, you might end up with all kinds of features that you never use. Get in the habit of selecting the ‘Custom’ option instead, and pick only what you need.

Upgrade your software

UpdateStar (www.updatestar.com) will scan your programs and report any it recognises that have updates available. Installing these should get you bug fixes, more features and better performance. Similarly, DriverMax will identify outdated drivers, then download and install updates.

Fix Internet Explorer 8

If IE8 seems very slow and unreliable then your upgrade from IE7 may have broken some DLL registrations. To fix this, open a command window (if you’re running Vista, right-click ‘cmd.exe’ and select ‘Run as Administrator’) and type ‘regsvr32.exe actxprxy.dll’. Press [Enter], then reboot your PC to see if the browser has got any faster.

Block Flash applets

Flash applets use up system resources and can slow down your browser. Often these applets take the form of unwanted adverts, so it’s a good idea all round to block them and recover the resources to give improved performance. Firefox users need only install FlashBlock to kill unwanted Flash apps, and if you install Adblock Plus as well, annoying ads and banners will become a thing of the past. Meanwhile IE8 can now selectively block Flash applets, too.Click ‘Tools | Manage add-ons’, select ‘Toolbars and extensions’ and opt to show all add-ons. Double-click the Flash add-on and click ‘Remove all sites | Close’. All Flash applets will now be blocked. However, if an applet is trying to run on a site you trust, click the warning bar, select ‘Run add-on’, add it to your allow list and Flash will be launched automatically on your next visit.

Tweak Microsoft Word

Simplify and speed up document displays by using a single typeface instead of many. To set this up, go to Word options, select ‘Advanced’, scroll to ‘Show document control’ and select ‘Use draft font...’. If you’re happy with your spelling, or at least content to check it when the document is done, turn off Word’s AutoCorrect options (in the Proofing section of Options) to save some resources. If you have a fast printer then Word’s default background printing can slow you down (Clear ‘Print in background’ in the Print section of Options). A corrupted or bulky ‘normal.dotm’ template may also negatively affect speeds. To sort this out, lose Word, locate the ‘normal.dotm’ file in your profile and rename it ‘normal.dotm.old’. You’ll lose your custom settings, but it may help to speed up the application. If you find that this doesn’t help, restore the previous normal.dotm to get your settings back.

Stop sharing

Windows Media Player’s media sharing functionality can be a real resource hog. To turn it off, right- click the Library tab, click on ‘Media sharing’ and clear the ‘Find media’ and ‘Share my media’ options. Next, launch ‘services.msc’, double-click Windows Media Player, click ‘Stop’ and set its Startup Type to ‘Disabled’ to save yourself some CPU time.

Clean your Outlook Inbox

The more messages Outlook stores, the slower it gets, so if you want to improve performance then some pruning is in order. Most email responses contain copies of the original message, so you should be able to delete earlier messages without losing information. Thread Compressor is a free Outlook add-in that will do this automatically. Save All Attachments will save all the attachments in multiple emails, and then remove them.

Disable add-ons

Removing unwanted add-ons frees up system resources and can make your apps more stable. In Microsoft Word 2007, click the Word button, then click ‘Word Options | Add-ins’. Choose the type of add-on you’d like to view in the Manage list, click ‘View’ and remove anything unnecessary. Repeat the process in Outlook 2007 by clicking ‘Tools | Trust Center | Add-ins’. In Adobe Reader, click ‘Help’, select ‘About Adobe plug-ins’ and note the filename of anything you don’t need. If you never want to save PDFs to RTF, say, then include ‘SaveAsRTF.API’. Close Reader, go to the plug-ins folder – probably ‘Program Files\Adobe\Reader 8.0\Reader\plug_ins’ – and rename the unwanted plug-ins, for example changing ‘SaveAsRTF.API’ to ‘SaveAsRTF.API.OLD’.

 

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