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ReadyBoost: Optimize and Accelerate Windows Vista

Introduced with Windows Vista, the ReadyBoost technology allows you to use a USB key or any other kind of Flash memory card (SD Card, CompactFlash, MMC, etc) to store files that are often used which will help reduce the load time off applications. With this article, we will help you discover how to put into practice the ReadyBoost technology, and what benefits you will gain from it.

ReadyBoost: Optimize and Accelerate Windows Vista

June 21st, 2007 - 10:25 am ET by Manuel D. C.
Adding to your PC’s memory is without a doubt the best way of increasing performance in a significant way. Especially since the cost of memory these days makes it very accessible to purchase either DDR or DDR2 memory. This is even more relevant for an office computer, either assembled by yourself or purchased, as there is often at least one memory bay left free.



OCZ DDR2 PC2-8500 Platinum

Adding memory makes Vista a lot more powerful.
You should plan on having at least 1 GB to comfortably use Windows Vista.




Unfortunately, this is not always the case with laptop computers where you generally have to replace the memory bars if you want to improve your capacity, with all of the memory banks often being used. The cost of this is also expensive. This is what the ReadyBoost technology is designed for, with it adding additional disk space which is faster then a hard drive, which is dedicated to cache memory and which manages the SuperFetch technology used to optimize the loading time of your most often used applications.



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