Speed Vista: Tweak your services
Well, this one is arguable. Many sites preach service tweaking as the end all of tweaks, and Vista does have a lot of services (like 130). However, a good portion of them are set to manual or disabled by default. Manual will only start the service when the operating system thinks it needs to use that program. However, Vista does have a lot of services set to Automatic by default that are not needed for many people. Granted, they are usually sleeping, not using any CPU, and if they use memory, they usually get paged out to disk pretty fast. But, regardless, it is fairly quick to do, and will gain you some improvement.
First off, how to tell what you should really be worried about. One new feature in Vista is the ‘Go to Service’ feature in Task Manager (or at least I never noticed it before). Open Task Manager, Processes tab, right click on a particularly heavy process, and select ‘Go to Service (s)’. This will jump you over to the services tab, and select all the services that are running under that process (multiple ones are usually running under svchost.exe, many of the others only map to one service). (more…)
default services, memory, open task, operating system, registry files, service feature, svchost exe, task manager processes, tweak, tweaking, tweaks, vista, Windows
Written by Jason on October 21st, 2007 with no comments.
Read more articles on open task and memory and service feature and svchost exe and task manager processes and default services and registry files and operating system and vista and tweak and tweaking and tweaks and Windows.

