Tea
Storage? I am Storage!
Tannin's Thinkpad sucks. It's really, really slow. I'm fairly sure that the performance issues are disk related. We are seeing a glacial boot process, and very slow program start-up times. One operational with whichever tasks are desired, it runs at a perfectly decent pace.
The hardware: T 400 Thinkpad; Core 2 Duo 2.53 CPU; 3GB DDR-3; 2 x 500GB Samsung drives; stand-alone ATI graphics chip.
OK, there is quite a lot of stuff starting up, but I don't think that anything in the startup is useless or especially unusual, and the thing is still slow to load anything after the startup is completed. It seems to be disk access that makes it slow.
We have defragged it from time to time but that doesn't make much difference. The boot drive stores quite a lot of data; it can be anywhere from 50% to 80% full as a rule. Sometimes more than that, but I'll ignore that as I don't expect decent performance from a system with a 90-odd percent full hard drive, and we empty stuff off again and defrag afterwards. I'm probably not running the Intel Matrix Storage Manager (or whatever they call it now) as I've known it cause a lot of trouble in the past and I don't trust it. For starters, it doesn't uninstall cleanly, which is always a danger sign.
Clues please gentlemen.
? Is it worth considering one of the pay-for disk utilities? Or are they, as I suspect, 99% hype and of little practical value?
? Is it worth considering the Intel storage driver? I have had bad experiences with it in the past, so I'm rather reluctant.
? Is it worth considering switching to the non-compatibility SATA mode? As I understand it, this might give me tagged queuing, but very little else as it can only influence the external transfer rate which is rarely a significant performance factor. Secondly, it introduces some very significant barriers to system management and reinstallation, notably needing a damn floppy drive before you can reinstall Windows - reliability and maintainability is much more important than small performance gains, so this is another one I'd want good strong evidence in support of before I went for it.
? Is it worth considering a reinstall? Last resort stuff, as I have quite a lot of software that's painful to reconfigure, and in any case I'm not convinced that the issue wouldn't return quite quickly, same as it did last time. I plan to reinstall next time I upgrade the boot drive, and avoid it till then if I can.
? Any other ideas?
The hardware: T 400 Thinkpad; Core 2 Duo 2.53 CPU; 3GB DDR-3; 2 x 500GB Samsung drives; stand-alone ATI graphics chip.
OK, there is quite a lot of stuff starting up, but I don't think that anything in the startup is useless or especially unusual, and the thing is still slow to load anything after the startup is completed. It seems to be disk access that makes it slow.
We have defragged it from time to time but that doesn't make much difference. The boot drive stores quite a lot of data; it can be anywhere from 50% to 80% full as a rule. Sometimes more than that, but I'll ignore that as I don't expect decent performance from a system with a 90-odd percent full hard drive, and we empty stuff off again and defrag afterwards. I'm probably not running the Intel Matrix Storage Manager (or whatever they call it now) as I've known it cause a lot of trouble in the past and I don't trust it. For starters, it doesn't uninstall cleanly, which is always a danger sign.
Clues please gentlemen.
? Is it worth considering one of the pay-for disk utilities? Or are they, as I suspect, 99% hype and of little practical value?
? Is it worth considering the Intel storage driver? I have had bad experiences with it in the past, so I'm rather reluctant.
? Is it worth considering switching to the non-compatibility SATA mode? As I understand it, this might give me tagged queuing, but very little else as it can only influence the external transfer rate which is rarely a significant performance factor. Secondly, it introduces some very significant barriers to system management and reinstallation, notably needing a damn floppy drive before you can reinstall Windows - reliability and maintainability is much more important than small performance gains, so this is another one I'd want good strong evidence in support of before I went for it.
? Is it worth considering a reinstall? Last resort stuff, as I have quite a lot of software that's painful to reconfigure, and in any case I'm not convinced that the issue wouldn't return quite quickly, same as it did last time. I plan to reinstall next time I upgrade the boot drive, and avoid it till then if I can.
? Any other ideas?