Re: The Windows registery - not very good
- From: Sermo Malifer <sermomalifer@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Thu, 14 May 2009 13:43:56 +0000 (UTC)
On Wed, 13 May 2009 22:48:55 -0700, Steve de Mena wrote:
GreyCloud wrote:sluggish-mac
Steve de Mena wrote:
GreyCloud wrote:
Steve de Mena wrote:
Someone sent this out on Twitter today....
"Clean Up and Revive Your Bloated, Sluggish Mac"
http://lifehacker.com/5252183/clean-up-and-revive-your-bloated-
And you still believe in fairy tales too I see. Couldn't debate the
points I made so you resorted to this, eh wintroll?
Oh the points like how Windows takes longer to startup with a large
registry? Despite the fact that only a couple of keys are read during
startup for specific bootup and startup items? (NOT "the whole
registry")
http://www.pc-washer.com/optimize-windows/speed-up-boot-shutdown-time.php
Fine-Tune Your Registry for Faster Startups
Over time, your Registry can become bloated with unused entries,
slowing down your system startup because your system loads them
every time you start up your PC. Get a Registry clean-up tool to
delete unneeded Registry entries and speed up startup times.
Registry First Aid, shown in Figure 1, is an excellent Registry
clean-up tool. It combs your Registry for outdated and useless
entries and then lets you choose which entries to delete and
which to keep. It also creates a full Registry backup so that you
can restore the Registry if you run into a problem.
http://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/how_to/4306154.html?page=2
Clean Up the Registry
The registry is a database in both Windows Vista and XP that
stores information about your hardware, software preferences and
user profiles. Whenever you change something in Windows, it is
logged in the registry. But when software is deleted or hardware
is upgraded, the registry isn’t always updated properly, so it
can end up full of outdated, useless entries. Unlike the Msconfig
utility and BIOS, casual deletions from the registry can cause
irreversible damage, so it is no place for an inexperienced
computer user to go tinkering on his own. But a good software
solution can help clean it out for you. Free programs such as
CCleaner and Glary Utilities, as well as more fully featured pay
software such as System Mechanic ($50), are available for
download online and will scrub the registry for “keys” left over
from old applications no longer resident on your machine. These
may be delaying boot time by causing the computer to scan for
nonexistent programs during startup. A clean registry makes the
whole process more efficient.
How much time you’ll gain overall depends entirely on how messed
up your computer was in the first place. Cleaning out all of the
digital clutter still won’t make your computer instant-on, but it
should make the wait more bearable.
Or the fact there is no "index file", when separate index files haven't
been required with databases since probably 1985 (when your experience I
think peaked)?
http://docs.sun.com/app/docs/doc/820-0384/nsslapd-mode-5dsconf?a=view
nsslapd-mode(5dsconf)
NAME | Description | Attributes | See Also
NAME
nsslapd-mode – database index file permissions
Description
Specifies the permissions used for newly created
index files.
GUFFAW!!
"Hee-haw" seems more appropriate for you to use, jackass! :D
.
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