Abit IT7 Max2, ATI Radeon 7000, 512MB Corsair 4000 memory, Pentium 4 2.0 GHz
4 hard drives for a total of something like 100 gigs
what else. i dunno. anyway, at work:
Abit IC7 G, ATI Radeon 9000, 512MB Corsair 4000 memory, Pentium 4 2.0 GHz
2 hard drives, 60 gigs total
i know most folks here have machines that go way beyond these specs. anyway. i list these because what i want to ask... once you pare down the installed OS, why go further? i know i am asking the wrong crowd but it's least likely to get me flamed here. HFSLIP users i think mostly want to use their machines, not tweak them all day. i understand using nlite, but that's not really what i'm talking about. i am talking about the guys who would re-run nlite just so they can do a complete re-install on a one-week old system just so they can save a hundred and fifty kilobytes. reduction is one thing, i'm talking about extremists.
i personally like a fast windows os, like 2000 (obviously). i don't like overhead i don't use, like fax DLLs in memory, that's just stupid on Microsoft's part. if IE were totally secure and local and internet zones did not leak into each other, i might use it, who knows. as its been said, ya can't un-swiss the cheese.
really small files
but why take out a component that you might use--or even one you don't for argument's sake--just to save 512k on a machine that has a 30 gig drive? why reduce the boot drive to 60 megs? here's why i ask: a good drive-space aware defragger will make the performance of a fairly loaded drive (say, a 170 meg install) about the same in a direct comparison. unused files simply will not cause any delay in load times and use of the operating system (again, the defragger has to use a good drive-space strategy, the built-in windows defragger is questionable in this regard). oh, and those who would talk about cluster-waste, this is NTFS, remember guys? and the kicker? performance geeks (especially XP users) don't even gut the MOST IMPORTANT thing that can increase their speed, the REGISTRY!!! they worry about a few kilobytes of files but their registries are weighing in at 20 megs??!?! WHAT?!?!?
language files
same deal. just because nlite makes the list look long does not mean these files take a lot of space. someone clue me in here please. these files don't amount to diddly. well, in total a few megs. again, as above -- so what? your machine has endless hd space. the os isn't even calling these files or loading them into memory. your defragged drive can let them sit unused without a problem because your defragger can put unused files at the end of the drive. and your swap file is on its own partition anyway, right? right?? (if not, it should be).
boot times
do these guys turn on their machine, time the boot with a stopwatch, and then post the results and pass out awards? i leave my machines running all day. i reboot every two weeks, maybe. maybe.
source reduction
a dvd-r drive can be found for under 100 USD / 85 EUR. a dvd blank is not that expensive. why reduce source? if you are reducing source on a cd-r, why? you can't fit ms office and windows on one cd-r. even if i burn all of my programs to cd-r, it takes one... i couldn't add them to my windows cd anyway, they all take 800mb. never mind adobe creative suite which is its own dvd. i'd need to reduce my windows install cd to about 10 mb (ten megs) to fit all of my other programs on the same disk, like nero, partition magic, dreamweaver, virtual pc, etc etc etc.
XP users who talk about performance
ok, i just do NOT get this one. they use xp, rip out all of the extra stuff so it's almost as slim as win2k, and say they use it because it's faster, or it's more stable, etc. faster or more stable than what? GEOS running on a Commodore 64? xp is pretty. it has to have hundreds of tweaks added to it so that it doesn't re-arrange your icons without asking, doesn't hide your desktop items, doesn't hide control panel items, doesn't hide task bar icons, doesn't try to cache stuff in the prefetch at boot time so booting doesn't take longer when you uninstall something later, doesn't mess with your start menu, doesn't offer some sort of retarded "shared documents" thing when you're trying to set up networking, etc. it has to be nlite'd to he?? and back just to strip out stuff so that it comes a little closer to the IE-free win2k.
doesn't anyone actually use their machines anymore? does all of this reflect the general ignorance of the mass user who doesn't understand drive defragmentation or how windows loads DLLs? do people really need to reduce the size of their source because they are ALL putting 7 operating systems on one multiboot dvd?
fdv, who is just not understanding any of this "reduce it to zero" stuff any more
This post has been edited by fdv: 16 November 2005 - 01:32 PM



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