Po' Smedley's Life And Brain Drippings
Published on March 17, 2008 By PoSmedley In Personal Computing
I recently upgraded my memory. I have a very modest computer and finally grew tired of seeing the little pop-up telling me my virtual memory was low while I was in the middle of a Photoshop project. I went from 512MB to 2GB. I'm still getting the low virtual memory message. I know it can be adjusted and I also know if you don't do it right, it can just make the performance worse.
This is what I am working with.





Any help would be appreciated. I know there is probably a standard setting for what I have to work with and probably a tweaked for optimum performance setting, so if you could let me know which way you're taking me with any adjustments, I would be grateful.
Thanks.

Comments (Page 3)
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on Mar 19, 2008
There's a number of options at your disposal po' ,the question is which road to travel

1)-Use symantec's downloadable removal tool before attempting anything first as it can in some cases break systems..lol..,remove the rest of the goodies that hp were kind enough to let you have ,once system is cleaned up,untick hybernation box,not sure if necessary but set page file to none,reboot to safe mode & defrag & disk clean up,registry clean with ccleaner,reset pagefile to whatever size tho it would be best above 1GB,i've got 1gb ram & set my pf to 2gb,then rebbot back to windows,install your most used programs first,then the others,after that lot head to ms & don't leave till fully updated. once everything is back to normal use disk imaging software to make a complete backup to another hdd,the image can go onto a disk that's smaller so long as the data does'nt exceed the drive's capacity,this link is to a free imaging software,i don't know how well it works as i've never used it,for other imaging there's acronis 9.0 or above or ghost.

WWW Link

2)-create recovery disks if you have'nt already(should be in "pc help & tools or just poke around the all progs list),then if you have a spare hdd test to see if the disks work,you'll need to remove the original hdd & set the secondary to master for this operation ,if all goes well,make some copies of those burned disks & put em in a safe place,then get a RETAIL copy of xp home or prof & load it onto whichever hdd you want this will free up some GB as there won't be a FAT recovery partition or any junk,again load most used programs first,update,defrag & use imaging software to make a complete backup to another hdd.


That's pretty much it use imaging software to create backups.

ps: it may not be necessary to make those recovery disks as i think's it's possible to use any xp home disk to re-install using the original OEM key on your sticker at back of machine ???

pps: been in your situation so everything i've said about imaging i've done,i also got me self a retail copy of xp prof onto a large hdd,made an image for recovery purposes & kept the original 40gb xp home as a spare in a cupboard if i ever need it,if all goes to custard i can be backup & running in the amount of time it takes to switch cables,to image say 200GB of data from one hdd to another it takes around 2-3hrs at a guess,either way a lot faster than deleting,installing,updating each time the shit hits the fan
on Mar 20, 2008
Checking it out, yrag.


create recovery disks if you have'nt already


I have 3 sets...and the D: partition to/ I learned that lesson years ago, the hard way.
on Mar 20, 2008
My recovery set failed the last disk was corrupted,never again did i trust verification,luckily i managed to get a set of floppie download images from somwhere that i was able to use instead.
on Mar 20, 2008
If you have a page file Windows will use regradless of how much RAM you have. In addition apps like Photoshop automatically use it regardless of real RAM. Photoshop uses it for everything from brushes data, to undo information, again even if you have loads of free RAM.

Another trick I use is to set pagefiles on multiple drives. I find it works quite well at least in Vista. In general put the page file on your fastest drive, even if it is the C: drive. If all drives are the same speed, (IE 7200 RPM) then definitely put it on a different physical drive than your programs.
on Mar 20, 2008
Po,
before you get too far you really need to scan your hard drive. See what brand of hard drive it is, go to the manufacturers website and download their diagnostic tools. That bad cluster message you got troubles me. If that drive is going bad you will be doing all of this for nothing unless you replace it.
on Mar 20, 2008
If you have a page file Windows will use regradless of how much RAM you have. In addition apps like Photoshop automatically use it regardless of real RAM. Photoshop uses it for everything from brushes data, to undo information, again even if you have loads of free RAM.


I have to reinstall PhotoshopCS3. The last time it reccomended that I make a seperate partition for it because of the memory it uses. I don't know how. I'm guessing I should if I want to get the best performance from it and my PC?

before you get too far you really need to scan your hard drive. See what brand of hard drive it is, go to the manufacturers website and download their diagnostic tools. That bad cluster message you got troubles me. If that drive is going bad you will be doing all of this for nothing unless you replace it.


Sigh. You had to bring that up. You're right. Before I go installing anything I will do just that. Thank you.
on Mar 20, 2008
Okay...
It's a Maxtor. Went to the web site and downloaded SeaTools for Windows. Passed everything except the SHORT DST test.
Followed site suggestion and downloaded SeaToolls for DOS. Since I ahven't installed anythin on the PC yet, I had to dowmload the free iso image burner the site reccomended to make the DOS boot disk for SeaTools.
Ran the boot disk..16 errors. SeaTools was able to fix them all. Ran it on my second internal hard drive and everything passed. Rescanned main disk and everything passed.

Thank you, Phoon. The disk appears to be good to go now. I've run into trouble with HD's before but it's always the last thing I think of when I am having any problems. This SeaTool app is quite handy. For me to burn and run a DOS disk is amazing. The app is very easy to use. I would highly reccomend it to anyone using SEAGATE or MAXTOR disks (not sure if it works on other brands) and it was all free, including the iso burning app.

Yrag has been helping me and I am waiting for him to answer my email before I go any further. he gave me quite the scolding on how bloated my system was with crap and add-ons and stuff that was redundant. (I'm a bad Smedley when it comes to add-ons)

I want get everything off of here I don't need (realplayer, weatherbug, etc) and then put on only what I need. (I had a few too many security apps and such running) Hopefully, resulting in getting the full use from my newly installed 2GB of RAM.
on Mar 20, 2008
Po...I fear that your drive is on it's way out. How long before it goes is anyone's guess, it could be 6 months, could be a year. It sounds to me like it hit on 16 bad sectors and marked them as unuseable. This is a sign that more will follow.
on Mar 20, 2008
Yes, I concurr with CarGuy. The fix will most likely be a short term fix. Best to gather the essence of the piggy bank and get a new drive.
on Mar 20, 2008
Best to gather the essence of the piggy bank and get a new drive.


What?!?! Do you know what I had to go through to get my wife to let me buy the memory?!?!?!?! My balance isn't that good to begin with and I think I'm allergic to latex. Along with that, nobody ..I mean NO-body should have to watch that many 'Beverly Hills 90210' reruns.

on Mar 20, 2008
Po' you can pick up hard drives very cheaply at newegg.com

You are in capable hands with Yrag. Hopefully he'll suggest a good utility package to keep your machine running smoothly. I think he likes jv16 which is a great but TuneUp 2008 is equally impressive.
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