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Black viper's site was taken down a long time ago. But here is the tutorial.


Top tweaks for a much faster PC
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The following is what I do directly after a clean install of Windows XP.
This does not mean that everything I do will work for you. Keeping that in
mind and ensure you are fully aware of the risks of tweaking your system
before doing so.

Points to note:

If you do only one thing on this page, make it "Number One."
Ensure that you are logged in as an "Administrator" or have Administrator
rights before performing any of these steps.
Even though that I do these steps directly after a clean install, all of
them with the exception of renaming the Owner and Administrator accounts can
be done at any time.


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Number One
Note: If you have previously used the "Owner" or "Administrator" account for
"general purpose," your account options could be affected if you rename the
accounts. I do not recommend to rename your account in this case. However,
if you have not already, you should password them now!

Most, if not all, games and applications require you to have "Administrator
Privileges" to install them.
Most, if not all, games require you to have "Administrator Privileges" to
use them.
Why should you do these things? Crackers need 2 things to access your PC:

1) A user name
2) A password.

If you do not password your Administrator account, 100% of their work is
done.
If you do not disable your "Owner" account, 50% of their work is done.
If you do not password your "Owner" account, 100% of their work is done.
The following is only valid for Windows XP Pro. For XP Home, skip down below
the horizontal line:

Disable the "Guest" account. Where?

Administrator Tools --> Computer Management --> Local Users and Groups -->
User folder --> Right click "Guest" and select "Properties." In the General
Tab, check "Account is Disabled."


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This is only valid for Windows XP Home: Do this NOW!!

Everyone on XP Home, by default, has Administrator privileges and the User
name is "Owner." If I know that, so does everyone else on the planet. Change
the name and / or password your account. If anything, password it. NEVER
have an account unprotected! EVER!

How?

Start --> Control Panel --> User Accounts --> Choose "Owner" --> Select
Change my name."

Also, you should (will) place a password on your account.

How?

Start --> Control Panel --> User Accounts --> Choose "Owner" (or what ever
account you named it above) --> Select "Create a password."

If you choose not to rename the Owner account, you should always password
them. The next time you install Windows, create a new user account and do
not use Owner and Administrator for "general computing." The new account can
have Administrator rights, though.

Number Two
This is valid for Windows XP Home and Pro.

If you are experiencing "random" slowdowns and "high" CPU usage for no
reason, these two services are the most likely cause of the problem. These
services are also a major cause of "missing" disk space. System Restore
Service could be taking up 3 GB of space, just on it's own.

For an easy method of creating multiple Service Configurations, please check
out my Windows XP Services Profile Guide.

System Restore Service creates system snap shots or restore points for
returning to at a later time. Every time you install a program or new driver
 plus on a schedule, this service creates a "restore point" to roll back to
if a problem occurs. This service would have been nice in the Win95 days due
to plenty of problems occurring (new DirectX version every 15 minutes) but
not required for the "much" more stable WinXP. This is the FIRST thing that
I get rid of on a clean installation. If you use this and enjoy it, good for
you. I never will. I feel it is faster and less hassle to just install clean
 A rather GOOD (and possibly the only) reason to use this "feature" is to
roll back your OS after installing an unknown program or testing software.
For example: BETA software of any kind or new, or before installing Service
Pack 1. NOTE: If you disable this service, your previous "restore points"
will be deleted. If, for what ever reason, you do not want this to happen,
do not disable this service.

Get rid of System Restore Service and Indexing Service. I disable both, plus
check the box, just in case it may decide to fire back up. This is valid for
Windows XP Home and Pro. Where do you find it?

With the default Category Control Panel:

Head to Start
Select Control Panel
Select Performance and Maintenance
Select System
Select System Restore Tab
Check "Turn off System Restore"
Select the Ok button to apply the settings
With the Classic Control Panel:

Head to Start
Select Control Panel
Select System
Select System Restore Tab
Check "Turn off System Restore"
Select the Ok button to apply the settings
Screen shots of the process are also available.


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After that, Disable and Stop the System Restore Service:

With the default Category Control Panel:

Head to Start
Select Control Panel
Select Performance and Maintenance
Select Administrator Tools
Select Services
Select "System Restore Service" (Double Click)
Select General Tab
In the Startup type: select "Disabled"
Select the Ok button to close the panel
With the Classic Control Panel:

Head to Start
Select Control Panel
Select Administrator Tools
Select Services
Select "System Restore Service" (Double Click)
Select General Tab
In the Startup type: select "Disabled"
Select the Ok button to close the panel
Screen shots of the process are also available.


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While you are there, you can disable and stop the Indexing Service:

With the default Category Control Panel:

Head to Start
Select Control Panel
Select Performance and Maintenance
Select Administrator Tools
Select Services
Select "Indexing Service" (Double Click)
Select General Tab
In the Startup type: select "Disabled"
Select the Ok button to close the panel
With the Classic Control Panel:

Head to Start
Select Control Panel
Select Administrator Tools
Select Services
Select "Indexing Service" (Double Click)
Select General Tab
In the Startup type: select "Disabled"
Select the Ok button to close the panel
Screen shots of the process are also available.


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Number Three
I turn off Automatic Updates. I disable the service and also check the
disable" box. This is valid for Windows XP Home and Pro.

I highly recommend you DO NOT disable this function.

After the installation of Service Pack 1, you may configure how "often"
updates are checked. Using default values, WinXP "Automatically" downloads
the updates and asks to "install" them.

A few reasons why you may think this is unacceptable in your situation:

You still have a dial-up connection. If XP feels like downloading when ever
it wants, it just may not allow you to do what "you" want.
You may want to know:
What, when and how an update is installed before using any bandwidth.
About the update before downloading.
Why you need it and what it fixes.
It is very important that if you decide to disable the Automatic Updates
service, you check the Windows Update site often to ensure the latest
critical updates and security patches are installed.

Again, I highly recommend you DO NOT disable this function.

Where do you find it?

With the default Category Control Panel:

Head to Start
Select Control Panel
Select Performance and Maintenance
Select System
Select Automatic Updates Tab
Select "Turn off automatic updating."
Select the Ok button to apply the settings
With the Classic Control Panel:

Head to Start
Select Control Panel
Select System
Select Automatic Updates Tab
Select "Turn off automatic updating."
Select the Ok button to apply the settings
Screen shots of the process are also available.


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After that, Disable and Stop the Automatic Updates service.

With the default Category Control Panel:

Head to Start
Select Control Panel
Select Performance and Maintenance
Select Administrator Tools
Select Services
Select "Automatic Updates" service (Double Click)
Select General Tab
In the Startup type: select "Disabled"
Select the Ok button to close the panel
With the Classic Control Panel:

Head to Start
Select Control Panel
Select Administrator Tools
Select Services
Select "Automatic Updates" service (Double Click)
Select General Tab
In the Startup type: select "Disabled"
Select the Ok button to close the panel
Screen shots of the process are also available.

I highly recommend not to disable this function.

It is very important that if you decide to disable the Automatic Updates
service, you check the Windows Update site often to ensure the latest
critical updates and security patches are installed.


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Number Four
Remove Remote Assistance and Remote Desktop Sharing.

Take note: Remote Desktop Sharing is NOT available with Windows XP Home. You
may request assistance from someone ONLY using Windows XP Pro.

Where do you find it?

With the default Category Control Panel:

Head to Start
Select Control Panel
Select Performance and Maintenance
Select System
Select Remote Tab
Uncheck both "Remote Assistance and Desktop Sharing" options
Select the Ok button to apply the settings
With the Classic Control Panel:

Head to Start
Select Control Panel
Select System
Select Remote Tab
Uncheck both "Remote Assistance and Desktop Sharing" options
Select the Ok button to apply the settings
Screen shots of the process are also available.


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Number Five
Adjust the Page File to a respectable level. This is valid for Windows XP
Home and Pro.

Can you get rid of the page file? Yes and no. If you have a boat load of
memory (greater than 512 MB, but I recommend 2 GB) you may be able to
function just fine. Some games REQUIRE a certain amount of swap space to be
created to even run, no matter how much RAM is available. Also, under
certain conditions, my sound card goes crazy (or does not function) in some
games with no swap file (oddly enough, Age of Empires 2). If you decide to
test your luck with no swap space or page file, you are on your own. :)
Please do not E-Mail me with your war stories about no swap. Every system is
different. I usually do not have one "unless something requires it that I am
running that day."

Where do you find it?

With the default Category Control Panel:

Head to Start
Select Control Panel
Select Performance and Maintenance
Select System
Select Advanced Tab
Under Performance, select the Settings button
Select Advanced Tab
Under Virtual Memory, select the Change button
Adjust as needed, or select "No paging File," then select the Set button
Select the Ok button to apply the settings
You must reboot for the changes to take effect
With the Classic Control Panel:

Head to Start
Select Control Panel
Select System
Select Advanced Tab
Under Performance, select the Settings button
Select Advanced Tab
Under Virtual Memory, select the Change button
Adjust as needed, or select "No paging File," then select the Set button
Select the Ok button to apply the settings
You must reboot for the changes to take effect
Screen shots of the process are also available.

If anything, create (preferably on a separate partition), a swap space of
constant size. For example, select Custom Size and place 1000 in "Initial"
and 1000 in "Maximum" Size boxes, then click Set Button. This will reduce
the amount of work needed to dynamically resize the page file, usually when
you need it most.

Some deffinitions need to be explained:

Physical RAM ~ The amount of Memory installed on a system. Physical RAM is
way" faster than a "swap file" or "swap space."

Swap File ~ The file that is located on your hard drive that "acts" like
Physical RAM but is way slower.

Virtual Memory ~ The name used for the sum of Physical RAM and the Swap File
 In other words: Physical RAM + Swap File = Virtual Memory. You cannot
disable" Virtual Memory even if you disable the Swap File. Meaning, 2 GB RAM
+ 0 MB Swap File = 2 GB Virtual Memory.

>From Fastest to Slowest, these are the configuration you can try:

No swap file at all. Some software may fail. You also need "much" memory to
do this. Greater than 512 MB, but I recommend 2 GB.
A static swap file on a separate hard drive (and preferably, controller)
from Windows and frequently accessed data.
A dynamic swap file on a separate hard drive (and preferably, controller)
from Windows and frequently accessed data.
A static swap file on a separate partition, but on the same physical hard
drive as Windows.
A dynamic swap file on a separate partition, but on the same physical hard
drive as Windows.
The Default: A dynamic swap file on the same partition and physical hard
drive (usually C:) as Windows.
Many factors affect performance of the I/O and Hard Drive system. Namely,
where" on the drive the particular swap partition is located, as well as
fragmentation of the swap file itself.

Benchmark using Unreal Tournament 2003 "Benchmark.exe" and various swap
configs:
System = P4 1.8 w/768 MB PC-133 Memory and a GF3

No Swap File System Managed Static (1150 MB)

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Benchmark using Unreal Tournament 2003 "Benchmark.exe" and various swap
configs:
System = P4 3.06 w/512 MB PC-1066 Memory and a ATI 9700 Pro

No Swap File Static (1150 MB)

As you can see, graphics card benchmarks are "not affected" by the status of
a page file in these configurations. Only you can decide if it is worth it
to you during game play and on your system.

If you have not already, reboot now.


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Number Six
Reduce the overhead associated with WinXP's new Themes. This is valid for
Windows XP Home and Pro. I have observed between 4 MB to 12 MB of RAM used
for the new themes.

With the default Category Control Panel:

Head to Start
Select Control Panel
Select Performance and Maintenance
Select System
Select Advanced Tab
Under Performance, select the Settings button
Select Visual Effects Tab
Select "Adjust for best performance."
Select the Ok button
With the Classic Control Panel:

Head to Start
Select Control Panel
Select System
Select Advanced Tab
Under Performance, select the Settings button
Select Visual Effects Tab
Select "Adjust for best performance."
Select the Ok button
Screen shots of the process are also available.


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After that, Disable and Stop the Themes service.

With the default Category Control Panel:

Head to Start
Select Control Panel
Select Performance and Maintenance
Select Administrator Tools
Select Services
Select "Themes" service (Double Click)
Select General Tab
In the Startup type: select "Disabled"
Select the Ok button to close the panel
With the Classic Control Panel:

Head to Start
Select Control Panel
Select Administrator Tools
Select Services
Select "Themes" service (Double Click)
Select General Tab
In the Startup type: select "Disabled"
Select the Ok button to close the panel
Screen shots of the process are also available.

I also remove the desktop picture. Why? Usually, back in the old days, the
desktop picture was a ".bmp" which is very uncompressed. Since I do not like
a bit map taking up so much memory (from 1.2MB to 3 MB per image) I make
them go away. Small tiles are better if you just HAVE to have a desktop
pattern and not a blank color.


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Number Seven
Adjust for any additional unneeded services. This is valid for Windows XP
Home and Pro. Read all about that HERE.

Do NOT adjust your service configurations using msconfig.

For an easy method of creating multiple Service Configurations, please check
out my Windows XP Services Profile Guide.

If you have not already, reboot now.
If you have rebooted, do it again.


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Number Eight
This is valid for Windows XP Home and Pro. Go to the "Add Remove Programs"
and click the "Windows components." Here, take out all the crap you do not
need. Such as "MSN EXPLORER" and such.

After Removing the unused Windows components, ensure that you check back up
on the services that you disabled. Some like to go back to Automatic after
playing with the Windows components (namely COM+ and Help and Support).

You may also adjust a file to "allow" you to remove other Windows components
 such as MSN Messenger. Here is how:

TAKE NOTE: You will need to enable "hidden file" viewing to see the inf
files.

IF YOU ARE SCARED, DO NOT MODIFY THE FILE... Also, you may experience a
delay of around 30 seconds or more when loading up Outlook before you can do
anything. Putting Messenger back will allow Outlook to function properly
again. If you use MSN Explorer, Messenger will also be running in the
background. It is how Bill is getting to the ".NET" stuff. "Software as a
service" is coming soon.

Go to your Windows\inf folder. The default is ~ c:\windows\inf

edit the file called "sysoc.inf"

Remove the reference of "hide" in this line:

msmsgs=msgrocm.dll,OcEntry,msmsgs.inf,hide,7

To make it look like this:

msmsgs=msgrocm.dll,OcEntry,msmsgs.inf,,7

You may also remove all references to "hide" in all of the other lines as
long as you KEEP the commas. Some components you cannot "uncheck" in the
add/remove programs GUI. If you do get them to uninstall, I do NOT support
it. You are on your own.


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Number Nine
This is valid for Windows XP Home and Pro. Download and install ALL updated
drivers from the hardware manufacture sites. I cannot tell you what site you
need to go to, but do your computer a favor and get updated drivers for
everything.

Reboot again.


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Number Ten
After updating all my drivers, I remove any excess icons (all of them,
basically) from the system tray (lower right) and recheck the services to
ensure nothing else was installed (like NVIDIA's "driver helper." Contrary
to popular belief, those little "quick access" icons take up a lot of room.

For example, MS messenger takes up about 3.6 MB just sitting there... not
even logged in... Bring it up, select tools, options, then uncheck "load at
startup" and "allow to run in background."

Also, Creatives "AudioHQ" running is REALLY not required.

Turning off "AudioHQ"

Uncheck "Load on Startup" and "Show icon on Taskbar" in AudioHQ's Options
menu.

ICQ's little "Net Detect" sucks up WAY to much memory. Make it go away.
Various Quick Tweak icons and even EZCD creator's icon annoys the hell out
of me. Make them all go away. If you just HAVE to have that quick access to
those programs, place them in the "quick launch bar" (located in the lower
left by default, where IE and "Show Desktop" buttons are). The icons will
not clutter your desktop and you can easily hit them from any normal windows
application. To top it all off, they do not take up memory or resources
constantly running in the background. Another plus, this will reduce your
boot up time.


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Number Eleven
I run msconfig and get rid of any annoying startup programs that may be
hiding from me. If you are not familiar with the operation and features of
msconfig, I am not going to go into them here. Do NOT adjust your service
configurations using msconfig.

To use msconfig:

Head to Start
Select Run
Type "msconfig" without the quotes
Select OK or hit Enter

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Number Twelve
Defrag the hard drive. Even if XP tells you that it does not need to, do it
anyway. It has much tolerance for what "needs" to be done and what should be
done. After all, if it was really efficient, there would be no need for you
to read this page.

Defrag again after installing your applications and games. After that, there
should be little need to do it again for awhile unless you
delete/uninstall/reinstall a lot of stuff.


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This listing is by no means complete, but it does hit on the high points.


-------Original Message-------

From: Father dougal
Date: 10/21/06 17:39:39
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [hlds] Windows 2003 Optimization/Settings/Tweaks Guide?

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google black viper's xp guide. i know ur not using xp but xp is basically
2003 with a few graphical changes. stop all the services u will not need. do
this test some where like your house first then u have access to the box if
anything goes wrong so u can format easily.

On 21/10/06, Noi | FX <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> This is a multi-part message in MIME format.
> --
> [ Picked text/plain from multipart/alternative ]
> Hi, I was looking into setting up my own dedicated servers on Windows 2003
> Server.  The server is an AMD Opteron 275, 2GB Memory, 15k RPM SCSI HD.  I
> was wondering if anyone had a guide for optimizing Windows 2003 Server for
> use as a Game Server Hosting platform.  I have a fresh install going and
> would like to know if anyone is experienced with this type of stuff could
> help with this setup and optimization of the OS so that I get the best
> performance out of my box and game servers.  I'm looking to run around 5
> Total CS/CS Source servers for myself and friends, 2 accelerated privates
> and 3 accelerated publics.  Thanks in advance.
>
>
>
> Noi
>
> --
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> To unsubscribe, edit your list preferences, or view the list archives,
> please visit:
> http://list.valvesoftware.com/mailman/listinfo/hlds
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