Image: Windows XP quickstart
Microsoft says it should take 30 secs for XP to start
R E L A T E D   C O N T E N T
ADVERTISEMENT

Start Windows XP faster

Follow these handy tips on speeding up Windows start-up and shutdown

Artur Hoffman, Jorg Geiger, Personal Computer World 04 Oct 2006
Download for this article
ADVERTISEMENT

According to Microsoft, it should take, at most, 30 seconds for Windows XP to start.

Under ideal laboratory conditions, perhaps. In the real world, not even brand-new computers with a freshly installed operating system boot up that quickly.

Before optimisation, our high-end reference system took 68 seconds to boot, but a few adjustments cut that to 43 seconds – a boost of 38.2 per cent.

It’s not always as quick as this, obviously, and the only way to make it quicker is to not shut down the PC at all, but rather to wake it from Standby, which only takes 10 seconds.

So if you’re really in a hurry, don’t turn off your PC completely; just put it into Standby.

This can make a real difference to the timings. In our tests, a notebook woke from Standby in about eight seconds compared with 109 seconds from cold and 81 seconds after optimisation.

Booting from power-saving hibernation (which uses about 5W) takes only 22 seconds.

Shutting down quickly and safely
Not quite such a time waster, but no less irritating, is slow shutdown. The worst delays are caused by unloading user profiles and closing down all the background processes.

Optimisation can help speed this up, too.

With a few tweaks, we accelerated shutdown on three PCs by up to 30.3 per cent – a significant increase. The high-end system shut down an astonishing 56.5 per cent faster.

Warning: although PCW has exhaustively tested the tips in this article, editing Registry entries carries a certain amount of risk, and you should back up your system before making changes.

The 10-second start-up
With a few tricks you can persuade almost any PC to start up between 20 and 40 per cent faster. It’s quick and easy to do.

Windows XP doesn’t necessarily require a long time to boot. Our testers reduced the cold-start time for Windows by between 20 and 40 per cent.

The tweaked high-end computer, for example, started 38 per cent faster, with a freshly installed operating system.

On a test notebook, a normal start-up took 109 seconds, but waking from standby took only eight seconds – saving 93 per cent at a stroke.


All PC Operating Systems
Tags: Feature

Like this story? Spread the news by clicking below:

Post this to Delicious del.icio.us    Post this to Digg Digg this    Post this to reddit reddit!

Permalink for this story
R E A D E R   C O M M E N T S
M A R K E T P L A C E
Get your free demo of Numara Track-It! 8 - the leading help desk solution for IT related issues.
Make presentations, review documents & share your entire desktop. 30-day free trial! (cc required).
Discover how remote support can fuel your IT business in ways you've never thought of before.
Apply ITIL best practices at your service desk while eliminating integration cost. Learn more here.
WAN based, automated, daily vulnerability assessments. Click here to try and request our whitepapers.
Have your product or service listed here >   
Sponsored links
F E A T U R E D   J O B S
TWICKENHAM, United Kingdom | Rugby Football Union
RUGBYFIRST PROJECT MANAGER, TWICKENHAM, c. £40,000 per annum   12 month fixed term RugbyFirst, the most modern administration system in British sport, is a game-wide internet-based tool to help run rugby at all levels, with the ... more >
Colindale (C1905), United Kingdom | NHS Blood and Transplant
 Operations Engineer, £28,313 - £37,326 pa plus High Cost Area Supplement, Colindale (C1905) About us The National Blood Service is an integral and vital part of the NHS. Our two million volunteer donors contribute 1.6 ... more >
United Kingdom | Data Transparency
.NET Software Developer,  £20,000 - £35,000 depending on experience About us Data Transparency is a small, rapidly growing company established in 2006 by an Oxford graduate. We create bespoke web-based data systems that are used in ... more >
London, United Kingdom | Kings College London
Website Content Manager - Mental Health Care Department of Psychology/Computing and Knowledge Management This is a unique opportunity for someone who can combine their talents as a web editor with an excellent ability to communicate ... more >
More job opportunities