Faster HDD Ordered, More RAM Needed?
Faster HDD Ordered, More RAM Needed?
My T43 has gotten down right SLOW with only about 63 running processes.
The pagefile usually stays around 550MB, yet I have 1GB of DDR2 ram (2x512MB sticks). (pagefile is continuous on the HDD and 2048MB in size).
I mainly use this laptop for MS OneNote and some heavy internet usage with Firefox. Firefox is quite a hog though, as having a couple news sites & forum sites open bumps up it's memory usage to 150-250MB's.
On average, I usually have about 300MB of available Physical Memory (according to Windows Task Manager).
Bootup is agonizingly slow as the HDD seems to be pegged out for at least two minutes or so. The machine acts like it's swapping a bunch of info from RAM to the pagefile & back & forth.
I ordered a 100GB Hitachi 7K100 7200rpm drive to replace the 80GB 5K100 5400rpm drive (will use the 80GB as a mirrored spare).
Am I to the point where I need more RAM? Would replacing the 2x 512MB sticks with 2x 1GB sticks help? Would XP SP2 further reduce the Pagefile size if I popped in 2GB of ram?
The pagefile usually stays around 550MB, yet I have 1GB of DDR2 ram (2x512MB sticks). (pagefile is continuous on the HDD and 2048MB in size).
I mainly use this laptop for MS OneNote and some heavy internet usage with Firefox. Firefox is quite a hog though, as having a couple news sites & forum sites open bumps up it's memory usage to 150-250MB's.
On average, I usually have about 300MB of available Physical Memory (according to Windows Task Manager).
Bootup is agonizingly slow as the HDD seems to be pegged out for at least two minutes or so. The machine acts like it's swapping a bunch of info from RAM to the pagefile & back & forth.
I ordered a 100GB Hitachi 7K100 7200rpm drive to replace the 80GB 5K100 5400rpm drive (will use the 80GB as a mirrored spare).
Am I to the point where I need more RAM? Would replacing the 2x 512MB sticks with 2x 1GB sticks help? Would XP SP2 further reduce the Pagefile size if I popped in 2GB of ram?
Vista Business on T43 w/ Dell 2405FPW @ 1920 x 1200
Thinkpad T43 (2687-DSU) | PM 2.0GHz @ 1.068v | 100GB Hitachi 7K100 | 2.0GB Dual-Channel | X300 64MB | 14.1" SXGA | DVD+RW | Intel 2915 ABG | ThinkDock II & Mini-Dock |
Thinkpad T43 (2687-DSU) | PM 2.0GHz @ 1.068v | 100GB Hitachi 7K100 | 2.0GB Dual-Channel | X300 64MB | 14.1" SXGA | DVD+RW | Intel 2915 ABG | ThinkDock II & Mini-Dock |
-
Melvyn
- Sophomore Member
- Posts: 180
- Joined: Tue Oct 24, 2006 12:21 am
- Location: Santiago, Dominican Republic
- Contact:
Your issue isn't memory.
My T42 with 1GB goes pretty fast and I use a lot of stuff more than you. Developing tools, compiler, etc.
I don't use swap file. with 1gb you don't need swapfile for basic stuff.
Firefox have a lot of memory leaks. Maybe you're affected by some virus, spyware or something so. Upgrade to Firefox 2 whith some fix regarding to memory leaks. Try without pagefile (you don't need it).
I use firefox very loaded with 15-20 windows. Previous versions (1.5 an others) reached 400mb of ram.
You can try with tune-up utilities to clean your computer. It's pretty good.
My T42 with 1GB goes pretty fast and I use a lot of stuff more than you. Developing tools, compiler, etc.
I don't use swap file. with 1gb you don't need swapfile for basic stuff.
Firefox have a lot of memory leaks. Maybe you're affected by some virus, spyware or something so. Upgrade to Firefox 2 whith some fix regarding to memory leaks. Try without pagefile (you don't need it).
I use firefox very loaded with 15-20 windows. Previous versions (1.5 an others) reached 400mb of ram.
You can try with tune-up utilities to clean your computer. It's pretty good.
Lenovo ThinkPad T60p 8741-A11:
Intel Core 2 Duo T7400 @2.16ghz, 3GB Ram, ATI Mobility FireGL V5250, HD 100gb @7200rpm
Old: ThinkPad T42 2373-M1U
Intel Core 2 Duo T7400 @2.16ghz, 3GB Ram, ATI Mobility FireGL V5250, HD 100gb @7200rpm
Old: ThinkPad T42 2373-M1U
Yeah, these results were similar even after upgrading to Firefox v2 last week. I use Symantec Antivirus and have no spyware or other leaching applications running.
Vista Business on T43 w/ Dell 2405FPW @ 1920 x 1200
Thinkpad T43 (2687-DSU) | PM 2.0GHz @ 1.068v | 100GB Hitachi 7K100 | 2.0GB Dual-Channel | X300 64MB | 14.1" SXGA | DVD+RW | Intel 2915 ABG | ThinkDock II & Mini-Dock |
Thinkpad T43 (2687-DSU) | PM 2.0GHz @ 1.068v | 100GB Hitachi 7K100 | 2.0GB Dual-Channel | X300 64MB | 14.1" SXGA | DVD+RW | Intel 2915 ABG | ThinkDock II & Mini-Dock |
-
Kyocera
- Moderator Emeritus

- Posts: 4826
- Joined: Wed Aug 10, 2005 8:00 pm
- Location: North Carolina, ...in my mind I'm going to Carolina.....
- Contact:
Well, while I don't care for anything Symantec (this is my personal experience) I wouldn't think the corporate version would be causing a severe slowdown like that. Are you connected to a network when you reboot, maybe looking for a domain controller.
Sometimes I monitor system idle process at boot to see what it hogging the most cpu. Maybe look in event viewer to see if any security events are logged, system or application.
Sometimes I monitor system idle process at boot to see what it hogging the most cpu. Maybe look in event viewer to see if any security events are logged, system or application.
Have you checked the GUI version, too, and all looks clean? How full is your disk?JHaislet wrote:Yep, I have Windows command-line defrag utility scheduled to run twice a week.
Which part of the Windows startup takes a long time?
- Windows logo on screen?
- Blue background, waiting for login screen
- Login completed, waiting for desktop to be ready
Yeah, I've looked at the GUI, it looks really good. Almost a solid band of blue with a few tiny slivers of red fragments. The green pagefile is contiguous. I think I'm just going to perform a clean install when the new Hitachi 7K100 gets here.
Vista Business on T43 w/ Dell 2405FPW @ 1920 x 1200
Thinkpad T43 (2687-DSU) | PM 2.0GHz @ 1.068v | 100GB Hitachi 7K100 | 2.0GB Dual-Channel | X300 64MB | 14.1" SXGA | DVD+RW | Intel 2915 ABG | ThinkDock II & Mini-Dock |
Thinkpad T43 (2687-DSU) | PM 2.0GHz @ 1.068v | 100GB Hitachi 7K100 | 2.0GB Dual-Channel | X300 64MB | 14.1" SXGA | DVD+RW | Intel 2915 ABG | ThinkDock II & Mini-Dock |
What about the startup delay? Which part is slow?JHaislet wrote:Yeah, I've looked at the GUI, it looks really good. Almost a solid band of blue with a few tiny slivers of red fragments. The green pagefile is contiguous. I think I'm just going to perform a clean install when the new Hitachi 7K100 gets here.
I don't mean to hijack this thread but...
I saw mention of the Client Security Solution. I downloaded and installed it because I thought it was a wise thing to do. I'm having doubts.
The boot up time is slowed. Also, I tried to boot into safe mode earlier today and it hung while the embedded security chip was being checked. I never did get to a safe mode boot.
Does anyone have any tips about removing Client Security Solution? Is it as simple as using Add/Remove Programs?
Thanks
I saw mention of the Client Security Solution. I downloaded and installed it because I thought it was a wise thing to do. I'm having doubts.
The boot up time is slowed. Also, I tried to boot into safe mode earlier today and it hung while the embedded security chip was being checked. I never did get to a safe mode boot.
Does anyone have any tips about removing Client Security Solution? Is it as simple as using Add/Remove Programs?
Thanks
Regards,
Larry
600E > 390X > A22 > A31 > T42 >T400 > T420i
Larry
600E > 390X > A22 > A31 > T42 >T400 > T420i
This seems to be where the most lag is. The HDD will stay pegged out for a considerable amount of time. For example, I opend Task Manager as soon as physically possible after the desktop started to load up, and the pagefile went from about 150MB to 400MB+ by the time windows had finished loading up.tomh009 wrote: Which part of the Windows startup takes a long time?
- Login completed, waiting for desktop to be ready
I'm not on a domain controller network and don't have THAT many tool bar items (also Client Security Solution is NOT installed).
Tool bar programs that load up on startup:
1) ATI Catalyst (little red ATI logo)
2) Logitech mouse software (programs buttons on MX1000)
3) Cisco Clean Access Agent (used for network security at networks I use)
4) Rightmark CPU Clock Utility (bumps the CPU voltage down a bit so the machine runs cooler, this is rock solid, no crashes)
5) Symantec Corp Antivirus (little yellow shield)
6) IBM Power Manager Gauge
7) IBM Active Protection Icon (turns off the hdd if it gets bumped/dropped)
That's it besides the normal windows stuff (e.g. network icon, speaker, hardware removal, ect).
Vista Business on T43 w/ Dell 2405FPW @ 1920 x 1200
Thinkpad T43 (2687-DSU) | PM 2.0GHz @ 1.068v | 100GB Hitachi 7K100 | 2.0GB Dual-Channel | X300 64MB | 14.1" SXGA | DVD+RW | Intel 2915 ABG | ThinkDock II & Mini-Dock |
Thinkpad T43 (2687-DSU) | PM 2.0GHz @ 1.068v | 100GB Hitachi 7K100 | 2.0GB Dual-Channel | X300 64MB | 14.1" SXGA | DVD+RW | Intel 2915 ABG | ThinkDock II & Mini-Dock |
Those look OK. Symantec is the heaviest of the bunch, but I run it myself, and mine still starts up faster. But here's something to try:JHaislet wrote:This seems to be where the most lag is. The HDD will stay pegged out for a considerable amount of time. For example, I opend Task Manager as soon as physically possible after the desktop started to load up, and the pagefile went from about 150MB to 400MB+ by the time windows had finished loading up.tomh009 wrote: Which part of the Windows startup takes a long time?
- Login completed, waiting for desktop to be ready
I'm not on a domain controller network and don't have THAT many tool bar items (also Client Security Solution is NOT installed).
Tool bar programs that load up on startup:
1) ATI Catalyst (little red ATI logo)
2) Logitech mouse software (programs buttons on MX1000)
3) Cisco Clean Access Agent (used for network security at networks I use)
4) Rightmark CPU Clock Utility (bumps the CPU voltage down a bit so the machine runs cooler, this is rock solid, no crashes)
5) Symantec Corp Antivirus (little yellow shield)
6) IBM Power Manager Gauge
7) IBM Active Protection Icon (turns off the hdd if it gets bumped/dropped)
That's it besides the normal windows stuff (e.g. network icon, speaker, hardware removal, ect).
1. Open Task Manager. Use View > Select columns to add Virtual Memory Usage, I/O Read Bytes and I/O Write Bytes.
2. Reboot and login
3. As soon as the desktop is ready, take a look at the task Manager. Are any of the process showing high I/O numbers? What about the initial VM usage?
-
Melvyn
- Sophomore Member
- Posts: 180
- Joined: Tue Oct 24, 2006 12:21 am
- Location: Santiago, Dominican Republic
- Contact:
Security chip is a good solution if you're seriously encouraged with security. I mean: if you're a CIA Agent and have stored a sort of ultra secret stuff there. Or if you work at Coca Cola and have the secret formula to make coca cola.
Else, Security Chip is too much for a common user.
You can disable the "security chip" and still you have fingerprint active.
Security chip also monitor almost everything you do at your computer. Try disabling it.
To disable security chip:
Start > All Programs > ThinkVantage > Client Security Solution
Go to menu bar > Advanced > Change Security Chip status
Click on button Deactivate.
Else, Security Chip is too much for a common user.
You can disable the "security chip" and still you have fingerprint active.
Security chip also monitor almost everything you do at your computer. Try disabling it.
To disable security chip:
Start > All Programs > ThinkVantage > Client Security Solution
Go to menu bar > Advanced > Change Security Chip status
Click on button Deactivate.
Lenovo ThinkPad T60p 8741-A11:
Intel Core 2 Duo T7400 @2.16ghz, 3GB Ram, ATI Mobility FireGL V5250, HD 100gb @7200rpm
Old: ThinkPad T42 2373-M1U
Intel Core 2 Duo T7400 @2.16ghz, 3GB Ram, ATI Mobility FireGL V5250, HD 100gb @7200rpm
Old: ThinkPad T42 2373-M1U
-
pianowizard
- Senior ThinkPadder

- Posts: 8368
- Joined: Tue Jun 28, 2005 5:07 am
- Location: Ann Arbor, MI
- Contact:
Is your hard drive almost full? That can slow down your computer big time. Can you remove some unnecessary files, or at least run CCleaner? Defrag afterward.
Microsoft Surface 3 (Atom x7-Z8700 / 4GB / 128GB / LTE)
Dell OptiPlex 9010 SFF (Core i3-3220 / 8GB / 8TB); HP 8300 Elite minitower (Core i7-3770 / 16GB / 9.25TB)
Acer T272HUL; Crossover 404K; Dell 3008WFP, U2715H, U2711, P2416D; Monoprice 10734; QNIX QHD2410R; Seiki Pro SM40UNP
Dell OptiPlex 9010 SFF (Core i3-3220 / 8GB / 8TB); HP 8300 Elite minitower (Core i7-3770 / 16GB / 9.25TB)
Acer T272HUL; Crossover 404K; Dell 3008WFP, U2715H, U2711, P2416D; Monoprice 10734; QNIX QHD2410R; Seiki Pro SM40UNP
Doing good on free space (~45% free, 34GB free of 75GB).
Ran defrag again (no red this time).
Also dumped AIM for Trillian. AIM seems to be major bloatware and was using upwards of 30-40MB of ram.
Trillian plays nicer @ ~16MB.
We'll see what happens when I restart next. I usually re-install windows every 3-4 months, however, it's been 8 months since my last format/reinstall, so we'll see.
Ran defrag again (no red this time).
Also dumped AIM for Trillian. AIM seems to be major bloatware and was using upwards of 30-40MB of ram.
Trillian plays nicer @ ~16MB.
We'll see what happens when I restart next. I usually re-install windows every 3-4 months, however, it's been 8 months since my last format/reinstall, so we'll see.
Vista Business on T43 w/ Dell 2405FPW @ 1920 x 1200
Thinkpad T43 (2687-DSU) | PM 2.0GHz @ 1.068v | 100GB Hitachi 7K100 | 2.0GB Dual-Channel | X300 64MB | 14.1" SXGA | DVD+RW | Intel 2915 ABG | ThinkDock II & Mini-Dock |
Thinkpad T43 (2687-DSU) | PM 2.0GHz @ 1.068v | 100GB Hitachi 7K100 | 2.0GB Dual-Channel | X300 64MB | 14.1" SXGA | DVD+RW | Intel 2915 ABG | ThinkDock II & Mini-Dock |
Update:
I had some time this week and got the new Hitachi 7K100 100GB 7200 (HTS721010G9AT00) installed. Figured it was best to start new, so I did a clean install of XP. However, this time, the only ThinkVantage program I installed was the Fingerprint Reader Software.
Questions:
1) ATI PowerPlay - Instead of installing the ATI Catalyst software package, I just used the ATI X300 drivers off of Windows Update. Will PowerPlay automatically kick-in when the laptop is on batteries with these drivers?
2) IBM Hard Disk Active Protection System (Shock Protection) - I have not installed the "APS" program yet in Windows. Is the Shock Protection mechanism a hardware program that runs whenever the laptop is physically powered on? Or is it a software program that requires the APS program to be installed and running?
My T43 currently is running about 38-40 processes, and I'd like to keep it that way if at all possible. I've noticed in the past that MUCH of the IBM software is really resource intensive, and if at all possible, I'd rather do with out.
I had some time this week and got the new Hitachi 7K100 100GB 7200 (HTS721010G9AT00) installed. Figured it was best to start new, so I did a clean install of XP. However, this time, the only ThinkVantage program I installed was the Fingerprint Reader Software.
Questions:
1) ATI PowerPlay - Instead of installing the ATI Catalyst software package, I just used the ATI X300 drivers off of Windows Update. Will PowerPlay automatically kick-in when the laptop is on batteries with these drivers?
2) IBM Hard Disk Active Protection System (Shock Protection) - I have not installed the "APS" program yet in Windows. Is the Shock Protection mechanism a hardware program that runs whenever the laptop is physically powered on? Or is it a software program that requires the APS program to be installed and running?
My T43 currently is running about 38-40 processes, and I'd like to keep it that way if at all possible. I've noticed in the past that MUCH of the IBM software is really resource intensive, and if at all possible, I'd rather do with out.
Vista Business on T43 w/ Dell 2405FPW @ 1920 x 1200
Thinkpad T43 (2687-DSU) | PM 2.0GHz @ 1.068v | 100GB Hitachi 7K100 | 2.0GB Dual-Channel | X300 64MB | 14.1" SXGA | DVD+RW | Intel 2915 ABG | ThinkDock II & Mini-Dock |
Thinkpad T43 (2687-DSU) | PM 2.0GHz @ 1.068v | 100GB Hitachi 7K100 | 2.0GB Dual-Channel | X300 64MB | 14.1" SXGA | DVD+RW | Intel 2915 ABG | ThinkDock II & Mini-Dock |
-
davidspalding
- ThinkPadder

- Posts: 1593
- Joined: Mon Nov 14, 2005 2:39 pm
- Location: Durham, NC
- Contact:
I believe the APS is software that uses sensors in your TP to operate the hard drive. I would recommend it, if you carry your laptop while running (some execs I've seen only dock once or twice a day, no kidding).
I hear you about some of the utilities being so much bloatware, I've talked myself into keeping most running, but the Message Center and such, naw.
My experience with Symantec is that it is indeed a system boat anchor. I've used McAfee for year, few complaints, switching to BitDefender this winter, even fewer complaints (top-rated for speed by Consumer Reports, so....). Of course, if your workplace mandates Symantec, so be it.
I would leave your pagefile at "system managed size." In 99.9% of the times I've checked, XP was setting my pagefile at the size that conventional wisdom recommended for manual settings. I've run without a pagefile once in a while, as an experiment (I have 2GB RAM, dual-channel, so no worries about available RAM), but some Windows programs need the virtual memory to work properly and "play well with others." Microsoft (or one of their MVPs) has an in-depth article about how virtual memory works in XP versus previous releases, I don't have the link handy, but it explained in detail how XP is a different situation than older Windows. OTOH, if you have your second drive in all the time, try putting your system drive pagefile at 250mb/500mb, and then put a "system managed size" pagefile on the second hard drive. (FYI, I don't think you can do this if your drives are mirrored.) I do this when I'm working in Photoshop and Premiere, and Windows runs pretty speedily. (Of course, Photoshop's scratch drive, and the work files, are on the second drive, and this accounts for some performance benefits as well).
P.S. Melvyn, you mentioned the security chip "monitor almost everything you do at your computer." Um, do you have any information that corroborates that? I think you're mistaken, it's not a "surveillance" module. My recollection is that it provides hardware encryption for stored passwords, fingerprint profiles, etc.
I hear you about some of the utilities being so much bloatware, I've talked myself into keeping most running, but the Message Center and such, naw.
My experience with Symantec is that it is indeed a system boat anchor. I've used McAfee for year, few complaints, switching to BitDefender this winter, even fewer complaints (top-rated for speed by Consumer Reports, so....). Of course, if your workplace mandates Symantec, so be it.
I would leave your pagefile at "system managed size." In 99.9% of the times I've checked, XP was setting my pagefile at the size that conventional wisdom recommended for manual settings. I've run without a pagefile once in a while, as an experiment (I have 2GB RAM, dual-channel, so no worries about available RAM), but some Windows programs need the virtual memory to work properly and "play well with others." Microsoft (or one of their MVPs) has an in-depth article about how virtual memory works in XP versus previous releases, I don't have the link handy, but it explained in detail how XP is a different situation than older Windows. OTOH, if you have your second drive in all the time, try putting your system drive pagefile at 250mb/500mb, and then put a "system managed size" pagefile on the second hard drive. (FYI, I don't think you can do this if your drives are mirrored.) I do this when I'm working in Photoshop and Premiere, and Windows runs pretty speedily. (Of course, Photoshop's scratch drive, and the work files, are on the second drive, and this accounts for some performance benefits as well).
P.S. Melvyn, you mentioned the security chip "monitor almost everything you do at your computer." Um, do you have any information that corroborates that? I think you're mistaken, it's not a "surveillance" module. My recollection is that it provides hardware encryption for stored passwords, fingerprint profiles, etc.
2668-75U T43, 2GB RAM, 2nd hand NMB kybd, Dock II, spare Mini-Dock, and spare Port Replicators. Wacom BT tablet. Ultrabay 2nd HDD.
2672-KBU X32, 1.5GB RAM, 7200 rpm TravelStar HDD.
2672-KBU X32, 1.5GB RAM, 7200 rpm TravelStar HDD.
-
christopher_wolf
- Special Member
- Posts: 5741
- Joined: Sat Oct 08, 2005 1:24 pm
- Location: UC Berkeley, California
- Contact:
The Security Chip is only for the archival and retrival of secure data and isn't much of a pass-through device for everyday computing and it doesn't maintain requests or deny actions unless they have to do with something like CSS and the password was wrong. 
IBM ThinkPad T43 Model 2668-72U 14.1" SXGA+ 1GB |IBM 701c
~o/
I met someone who looks a lot like you.
She does the things you do.
But she is an IBM.
/~o ---ELO from "Yours Truly 2059"
~o/
I met someone who looks a lot like you.
She does the things you do.
But she is an IBM.
/~o ---ELO from "Yours Truly 2059"
-
- Similar Topics
- Replies
- Views
- Last post
-
-
SOLD: Thinkstation D30, Dual Xeon E5 2670, 64GB RECC RAM, no HDD, no GPU $699
by RMSMajestic » Thu Jan 26, 2017 7:33 pm » in Marketplace - Forum Members only - 0 Replies
- 252 Views
-
Last post by RMSMajestic
Thu Jan 26, 2017 7:33 pm
-
-
-
SOLD excellent condition T520 with *FHD* screen (1920x1080), i5-2540 cpu (2.6GHz), 4GB RAM, 320GB HDD
by tpdude4 » Sun Feb 26, 2017 8:33 am » in Marketplace - Forum Members only - 0 Replies
- 1168 Views
-
Last post by tpdude4
Sat Mar 04, 2017 6:46 am
-
-
-
FS: T520 with i5-2540 cpu (2.6GHz), 6GB RAM, NVIDIA 1GB gpu, 1600x900 screen, 160GB HDD
by tpdude4 » Sun Jun 25, 2017 6:09 am » in Marketplace - Forum Members only - 0 Replies
- 160 Views
-
Last post by tpdude4
Fri Jun 30, 2017 4:18 am
-
-
-
X1 Carbon (5th gen, 2017) : 8gb Ram or 16gb Ram , i5 or i7
by asterinex » Tue Apr 25, 2017 4:12 am » in ThinkPad X1/X1C - 26 Replies
- 2155 Views
-
Last post by w0qj
Sat Apr 29, 2017 11:22 am
-
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 3 guests




