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- Windows 98
- Post Setup Tips
- (C) 2000 by CptSiskoX@FlashMail.Com
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-
- This file is NOT in the public domain. For latest version visit:
- http://www.fortunecity.com/meltingpot/ny/413/
-
- ComputingX Discussion Forums:
- http://www.delphi.com/computingx/start/
-
- Disclaimer: I take no responsibility for anything that happens as a result of
- using any of this information which is provided as-is and has no warranties
- implied or otherwise.
-
-
- After installing Windows 98 or Windows 98 Second Edition, there are several
- small adjustments, refinements, and tweaks that can be used to improve
- response time, system performance, etc. This document attempts to address many
- of these items. Many will also work for Windows 95 computers, but the general
- focus is on Windows 98 and Windows 98 Second Edition (SE).
-
-
- Tweak Recycle Bin
-
-
- Right-click on the Recycle Bin on the Windows 98 desktop.
- Left-click Properties and place the dot in Configure Drives Independently.
- Click (C:) and adjust the slider as desired.
- I recommend doing this for all your hard drives and removable disks. When
- finished, click Apply and then OK. This will give you more disk space as
- needed and desired. I use 3% which is 61.4 megabytes on a 3.2 gigabyte hard
- drive, but your settings may vary, depending on your needs and preferences.
-
-
- Enable DMA Mode for Hard Disks and CD-ROM Drives
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- If you have a hard drive or CD-ROM drive that supports DMA Mode, you can
- increase the speed of your hard disks by allowing them direct memory access.
- If you are not sure if your drive(s) support this configuration check with
- your drive maker or system vendor. Do not use it unless you are certain it
- will work on your system. To enable it, right-click on My Computer on your
- desktop and left-click Properties. Click Device Manager and click CD-ROM or
- Disk Drives [depending on which you wish to enable or disable DMA on]. Select
- your drive and click Properties, Settings, DMA. Warning: This may not work on
- some systems and/or with some drives.
-
-
- Adjust Typical Role Settings
-
-
- To speed up caching of disk drives and improve performance, right-click on My
- Computer, left-click Properties, and click the Performance tab. Click File
- System and change Typical Role of this Computer to Network Server. Also set
- Read-ahead optimization to Full. This does not require you to be on a computer
- network and works on standalone machines as well.
-
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- Disable Floppy Search
-
-
- Right-click on My Computer, left-click Properties, and click the Performance
- tab. Click File System and on the Floppy Disk tab uncheck Search for a new for
- a new floppy drive each time your computer starts. This way, Windows will not
- search for a new floppy disk drive every time it boots up, thus speeding up
- the boot time and will use the previous settings. You should undo this if you
- install a new floppy drive or have problems with yours.
-
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- Speed up CD-ROM Access
-
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- Right-click on My Computer, left-click Properties, and click the Performance
- tab. Click File System and on the CD-ROM tab turn the Supplemental cache size
- to large [slider to the far right side] and set to Optimize access pattern to
- Quad-speed or higher.
-
-
- Speed up Removable Disks
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-
- Right-click on My Computer, left-click Properties, and click the Performance
- tab. Click File System and on the Removable Disk tab, place a check in Enable
- write-behind caching on all removable disk drives. Disable this option if you
- have problems after enabling it.
-
-
- Get Latest Windows Updates
-
-
- Click Start, Windows Update. Select Product Updates from the options that come
- up [please note that this requires an Internet connection]. Check the items
- you wish to download and install and follow the on-screen instructions.
- Microsoft posts frequent bug fixes, updates, patches, etc at their website:
- http://windowsupdate.microsoft.com/
-
-
- Configure Scheduled Tasks
-
-
- Click Start, Run, and type "TuneUp" [no quotes]. Windows 98 will open the
- Maintainence Wizard which will allow you to set options and scheduling for
- automatic sessions of Disk Defragmenter, ScanDisk, and other maintainence
- tasks to keep your system in tip-top shape.
-
-
- Maintaining "clean" drive(s) and free more space
-
-
- Backup critical files to a removable disk or a WWW or FTP site.
-
- Empty recycle bin.
- Empty browser(s) cache.
- In Internet Explorer, be sure to check "Delete all offline content" as well.
- Delete browser(s) history.
- Delete .CHK, .OLD, .BAK, .GID, .TMP files. None of these are needed.
- Delete empty folders named TMP or TEMP. It is usually completely safe to
- delete the contents of your TEMP folder, such as C:\Windows\Temp (path may
- vary).
- Delete broken shortcut files with .LNK extension. Often files with .001, .002,
- etc extensions can be deleted safely, as they are usually backups of old
- versions of C:\Autoexec.bat or C:\Config.sys, etc [text files]. To be safe,
- view them in Notepad or any other text editor before deleting.
-
- Remove seldom or never used software from Add-Remove Programs in the Control
- Panel, or via the software's own uninstall software. If it does not have
- either option available, manually remove its file folder(s) in Windows
- Explorer and remove the registry entries (using Start, Run, Regedit - for
- advanced users only).
- Delete unwanted or unneeded cookies files (.TXT extension is used by MS IE).
- These are usually found in C:\Windows\Cookies, but your path may vary.
- Netscape stores its cookies in its own subfolders, in a file named
- Cookies.txt, which can also be safely deleted.
-
- Erase older e-mail, or back it up to another location. Too much e-mail in your
- inbox or other e-mail folders can bog down your system and cause a big
- performance hit. I suggest no more than 20 e-mail messages in your e-mail
- software at a time, as a general rule.
-
- Delete unwanted or unused ActiveX Controls from your
- C:\Windows\Downloaded Program Files folder (your path may vary).
- Do the same for browser plug-ins which you don't need or want on your
- computer.
-
- When installing new software, if there is an option for Custom settings, it is
- often best to choose it. This way, you can install only those features you
- want, and avoid those you don't. This means the program will take up less disk
- space.
-
- For larger files which are used often and not acceptable to simply delete,
- consider zipping them with an archiving application such as WinZip
- [http://www.winzip.com/] or another similar utility. Zipping can reduce file
- size greatly and allows you to place more data in an area than you would
- normally be able to. These zip files can be backed up to WWW or FTP sites or
- CD-ROM discs if you have a CD-R/CD-RW drive available, or even to Zip drives
- or other removable media.