21 Essential Steps to Make Your PC Better/Faster/Stronger
Posted 05/28/09 at 11:30:40 AM by Gordon Mah Ung
9. Archive Your Files
So, you know that hard drives get slower as they approach their full capacity. If you’re lucky enough to have more than one hard drive in your PC (and most power users do), why is your host OS drive so full of crap you don’t need? To improve the overall performance of your PC, move your old documents and games that you don’t regularly use onto the secondary drive.
10. Get S.M.A.R.T
Modern hard drives feature Self-Monitoring, Analysis, and Reporting Technology, or S.M.A.R.T., which can warn you if your hard drive is starting to fail—before it actually does. Unfortunately, the OS doesn’t pay attention to these warnings. So, even though you could have known a few months in advance that your drive was about to go tango uniform, the OS kept it a secret. There are a number of good free tools available that can relay the message, such as SpeedFan (www.almico.com/speedfan.php) and DiskCheckup (http://passmark.com), but their interfaces can be a bit overwhelming for the average Joe or Jane.

For something so simple that anyone can understand it, we run HDD Health (www.panterasoft.com). Install it, configure it to run at launch, and it will alert you (even by email) if enough S.M.A.R.T. errors occur to rate a possible impending drive failure. A simple temperature bar and health bar will also help you decide if it’s time to start doing daily backups of the drive.
11. Revo Uninstaller
Do you have an application that you just can’t get rid of? Think of Revo Uninstaller as a stain remover for software. If some beotch app is dug in like an Alabama tick, Revo Uninstaller (www.revouninstaller.com) will rip it out, head and all. Once you’ve installed and executed the app, you’ll be greeted with a palette of applications you can uninstall. When you choose an unwanted app and click Uninstall, you’re given four levels of uninstall to choose from. The first is the Standard uninstall. The Safe uninstall builds on the Standard uninstaller and searches the registry and hard drive for leftovers. Moderate and Advanced build on Safe by increasing the scope of the search for leftovers from the application. For most apps, Safe is fine. An additional Hunter mode lets you use a sniper-scope view to track down such things as which application is responsible for a toolbar whose origins are unknown.

12. S3 Fixes
Utilizing your PC’s S3 standby state can help make your machine more energy efficient—if only it weren’t such a pain to implement, we could write a whole book on S3 problems. To help you on your way, here are some very common fixes that might solve the S3 standby problems you’re having.
Update the video drivers. If your machine fails to come out of standby, you should obtain the latest videocard drivers directly from the chip manufacturer’s website (Nvidia, ATI, Intel).
Update the BIOS: a motherboard’s BIOS can greatly affect how standby works on a PC, and updating it may fix your problem. Make sure you’re running the latest BIOS from your
motherboard maker.
Insomnia. If your system mysteriously wakes up, it may be caused by the USB devices or NIC. To disable a device from waking your system, go into the Device Manager (right-click My Computer, click Properties, and select Hardware and Device Manager in Windows XP. In Vista, right-click My Computer, select Properties, and select the Device Manager link on the left-hand pane). Double-click your NIC, select the Power Management tab. Uncheck “Allow this device to bring the computer out of standby.” Now go back, select the mouse, and do the same.

Sometimes in XP you’ll find that after installing a new USB mouse or keyboard, your system won’t sleep properly. To correct that, you may have to use regedit to create the following registry entry: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Services\usb “USBBIOSx”=DWORD:00000000
If the machine still won’t sleep after entering the registry key, you may have to unplug USB devices one by one until you find the one that’s causing the problem. Alternatively, you can also see if the BIOS lets you disable “USB resume from suspend,” which would prevent USB devices from waking the machine. Not all BIOSes have this flag, though.
Thanks
Submitted by philippecote3 on Wed, 08/12/2009 - 6:34pm
Very helpful, thank you.
DriverAgent
Submitted by cchriskaufman on Wed, 06/10/2009 - 5:51am
Your approach of "freeloading" the DriveAgent information and doing your own driver locating is by far the best. I shelled out the $$ and was given drivers that were older than what I had on my system, drivers that weren't for my hardware at all. In general, save your money and just freeload!!!!
On the other hand, the Secunina PSI is great!!! And for home use, it's FREE!!!
CK
Antec 900
Submitted by mtjepkema on Fri, 05/29/2009 - 7:47pm
Get an antec 1200... they are bigger and you can fit your GTX2XX's in there. The Antec 900 is exactly 10.5 inches deep - just enough for your GTX cards with no HDD's in the way. The Antec 1200 has more depth for your 11 inch GTX295.
Computer
Submitted by themodefanatic on Fri, 05/29/2009 - 6:20am
Before the first subject there is a picture of a computer. What kind of computer is it. Does anyone know? I believe its a Dell but not sure.
If your talking about
Submitted by Mr.Pooney on Fri, 05/29/2009 - 7:44am
If your talking about the cover picture of the story its an Antec 900 (one) if im not mistake
I've been thinking of replacing my Thermaltake M9 for one of thoes
i had to advance the hard drive cage a good 2'' to fit my 9800gt
so now the fan its way out in front and not covered...
Havent had a toe cut of yet but.......... "stuff" happens
Intel C2D E7200
ASUS P5K/EPU MoBo
BFG 8800 GT OC2 Video Card
4GB Kingston HyperX 1066 DDR2 Ram
5 W.D 500GB HD
2 LG G22N 20x DVD±RW DL
CoolerMaster 650Watt PS
I'll ask again... as far as
Submitted by yogurt80 on Thu, 05/28/2009 - 11:04pm
I'll ask again... as far as compressing files goes, I have a 1tb drive that is almot
completely full from my backed up DVDs and Blu Rays.
Can I compress
these files on the hard drive without damaging the quality?
Compressed Air ... in a can
Submitted by johnnymegabyte on Thu, 05/28/2009 - 8:19pm
Compressed Air ... in a can ?
Use a balloon pump from the dollar store. Also "green" ... take that environMENTALists
I agree with Mr.Pooney
Submitted by nightkiller on Thu, 05/28/2009 - 5:50pm
The genius who dreamed up this strategy should be made to sit in a single pair of Attends without removing them for a week. They are either not respectful of their clients who put their money upfront AND in good faith with the expectation that it will not be used to finance freetards or they are simply showing that they are intellectually bankrupt in what they consider to be original content.
Perhaps this is a subtle signal to move on to arstechnica or anandtech for the real deal.
You choose a flightless bird as a mascot and wonder why it doesn't take off?
Better List
Submitted by jsmithstate on Thu, 05/28/2009 - 4:38pm
Two tips to make your older computer run faster than new.
-Uninstall Vista
-Install Damn Small Linux (whole O/S runs in ram)It will make your pentium 2 feel like a new quad core CPU.
even better
Submitted by johnny3144 on Thu, 05/28/2009 - 9:06pm
-uninstall whatever OS you have
-run DOS
the speed of outprint scrolling will make your pentium 2 feel like a quad core
What a horrible list
Submitted by ericbrow on Thu, 05/28/2009 - 1:58pm
I disagree with the large majority of these suggestions. Most of this stuff is crapware itself, and will only integrate itself into the OS thereby slowing it down. The few suggestions I would not mark as bad I would also suggest that they do not need to be done on a regular basis (defragging, for example, only needs to be done on occasion unless you have been installing/uninstalling lots of software). Compressing folders may gain some space, but ALWAYS slows down a computer. Many of these programs may be decent if installed and ran once or twice, then uninstalled. I can't tell you how many machines I've had come through my shop that have not only the software listed here, but 4 or 5 others of the same type of software gumming up the system.
Loyal Subscribers.
Submitted by lhatten on Thu, 05/28/2009 - 1:48pm
This may or may not be the place for this, but the Mr Pooney has a point here (not well written but a point). It has bothered me when I am reading my new mag and realize that I have already read the article online. It seems that it would be a good idea to delay the online content slightly. Also, I think it would be a good idea to have a subscribers portion of the web site. You could put in your subscription number and then access "extra" material. As far as I know, the model of giving away your content while trying to sell your publication is not working for newspapers, why should it work for magazines?
2nd Notion
Submitted by FenixSS on Thu, 05/28/2009 - 11:13am
I agree, should be printed for great bathroom reading material :D
Diskeeper is great.
Submitted by foamcup on Thu, 05/28/2009 - 8:55am
Glad to see it get mentioned. I've been using it for years, it's worth the money. It's probably not necessary on my Vista machines, but eh.
ESD safe vacuum
Submitted by aplc0r on Thu, 05/28/2009 - 8:47am
Just as others have said, the problem with using a vacuum isn't
capacitors being damaged (you have a better chance of doing that with
using compressed air too close), its the static electricity that can
build up and jump onto your board. I used to use a compressed air tank
out in the garage, but once I moved to an apartment this wasn't an
option. 3M makes a small electrostatic safe vacuum (labeled ESD safe)
for about $150 which is great for large cases, and doesn't make a huge
mess.And a quick note about SMART warnings. Most BIOSs and Vista will warn
about a SMART failure, but usually only when there is imminent failure.
Usually turned on by default, the BIOS runs a quick SMART test during
POST. It hardly slows down boot at all. Vista will actually warn you
via a system tray notification telling you to back up your data
immediately.
I have to say that I like
Submitted by mls067 on Thu, 05/28/2009 - 8:25am
I have to say that I like having a hard copy maxpc lying around as well as having it online. I guess I am just old school like that. I have another tech magazine (like I need another besides maxpc...ok I'll remove my lips now) that went to just digital and while it works well, I am not going to renew my subscription. If I am going to have to connect to read it I can probably find everything in just a few sites for free.
Hard copies For Everyone
Submitted by PhelanPKell on Thu, 05/28/2009 - 10:53am
Three words: Bathroom Reading Material.
Given, my MaxPC mags go into my backpack and come everywhere with me for about 6 months after they came out, but it's nice to have something good to read in the bathroom either way. ^^
This is a great how do you do to the loyal subscribers!
Submitted by Mr.Pooney on Thu, 05/28/2009 - 8:07am
So.... i got my mag 2 days ago... taking in to acount that i live in northern canada it may take a few days longer then most but what do i see today on the site? THE F**KING COVER STORY TO THIS MONTHS MAG!
SO YOUR TELLING ME THAT I COULD HAVE KEPT MY BUCKS AND STILL GOTTEN THE WHOLE STORY "For FREEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE"? that is just BS! i mean! atlease wait till the next issue comes out `s|-|it!
---------------------------------------------
Intel C2D E7200
ASUS P5K/EPU MoBo
BFG 8800 GT OC2 Video Card
4GB Kingston HyperX 1066 DDR2 Ram
5 W.D 500GB HD
2 Samsuns SH-S223 DVD±RW
CoolerMaster 650Watt PS
That's pretty much what the
Submitted by schmitty6633 on Thu, 05/28/2009 - 9:23am
That's pretty much what the magazine is. You can get all of it a month ahead online and the mag is mainly outdated. Pretty much the mag is just what's been posted on the site with a few extra goddies. Ripoff to me.
Driver Agent
Submitted by linkmaster6 on Thu, 05/28/2009 - 7:32am
Driver Agent is a piece of crap you have to pay for, do your own driver homework
My tip for a faster computer
Submitted by MAXPCreader07 on Thu, 05/28/2009 - 7:09am
My tip for a faster computer is to use a faster/lighter OS.
For example: instead of Windows Vista, try Windows 7, or instead of Ubuntu, try CrunchBang Linux.
Cleaning PC
Submitted by pglasc on Thu, 05/28/2009 - 6:36am
I really do not advise using a vacuum to clean out the pc. The vacuum can build up static electricity.I have an air tank with electic motor on it. I put it up to about 30 psi and go after it. Alot cheaper than buying compressed air all of the time plus I use it for a million other things. As inexpensive as hard drives are get a 1TB hard drive for around $100 and be done with it.
Cleaning a PC Case
Submitted by inmate365 on Thu, 05/28/2009 - 6:14am
I quit using copressed air years ago. I have been using my electric leaf blower to clean PC's.
Looks like a mini A-bomb with all the dust being blown out of the case. Just be sure you know
where all the wires go!
Why an electric leaf
Submitted by wherryj on Thu, 05/28/2009 - 12:07pm
Why an electric leaf blower? I always go with gas. This is MAXIMUM PC after all. Yout can't really get the horses out of the electric blowers.
Sure, cleaning the fumes out of the house is a hastle,and there's always the risk of asphyxiation or the occasional oil spill, but since when is over the top not a good thing?
Air Compressor
Submitted by lancethepants on Thu, 05/28/2009 - 6:31am
I just hook up a nozzle to my air compressor, and blast the innards of my pc 's. Get's the job done good, and will even get all the junk out in the cpu heatsink fins. At first I wondered if it wouldn't be good for it, but I've been doing it for years now, and it's never rendered any computer inoperable. Works like a charm
Dont bag on Gordon...
Submitted by hiremenow on Thu, 05/28/2009 - 5:02am
Gordon is badass and the reason he is using the default disk cleanup is probably to keep you from having to spend money he's a genius.
Disk cleanup is old school
Submitted by ptmcannany on Thu, 05/28/2009 - 4:27am
There is alot of other product that do a much better job than disk cleanup. I can’t be believe that someone in the IT field wrote this article.
And yet you didn't name a
Submitted by Cache on Thu, 05/28/2009 - 6:26am
And yet you didn't name a single one. Ample space here in the comments field, I believe; name a few.
And the 1mm thick dust build
Submitted by yogurt80 on Wed, 05/27/2009 - 11:58pm
And the 1mm thick dust build up on your fans is easily cleaned with some swabs and alcohol.
I use a series of
Submitted by Denis63 on Thu, 05/28/2009 - 6:16am
I use a series of paintbrushes, mainly a 4-inch horsehair badboy. it cleans everything and dosn't push capacitors around, plus it was 10 bucks and it'll last forever :) -Denis
Ooo- that's good
Submitted by yogurt80 on Thu, 05/28/2009 - 6:53am
Ooo- that's good advice!! I like that idea!
Thanks! i only use cans of
Submitted by Denis63 on Thu, 05/28/2009 - 11:26am
Thanks! i only use cans of air for my PSU's. and the massive paintbrush gets deep down in the fins of a heatsync! i should of mentioned that... -Denis
do not use canned air on electronic components!
Submitted by Captain on Wed, 05/27/2009 - 11:28pm
i learned recently that blowing compressed air onto electronics with dust on it can significantly damage it, so i advise against it. Use a vaccum, its much much safer.
Really?
Submitted by Havok on Thu, 05/28/2009 - 7:05am
And the static generated from a vaccum is much safer? Hey everone, lets have some CPU fried rice! I'll get the vaccum, you bring the Phenom! Quick tip to the unwise: don't push your spray nozzle right up against your equipment when you blow it out. Leave an inch or two gap 'tween the nozzle and surface and you won't 'damage' your gear.
OMGWTFBBQ
So, instead of blowing
Submitted by Caboose on Thu, 05/28/2009 - 7:04am
So, instead of blowing dust off of electrical sensitive components which is much safer, we'll create a static charge which can cause even MORE damage, to the point of frying a component which will render the part dead. Hmmm, me thinks your method is flawed!
-= I don't want to be dead, I want to be alive! Or... a cowboy! =-
What's so bad about Smart
Submitted by yogurt80 on Wed, 05/27/2009 - 10:24pm
What's so bad about Smart Defrag? I've rarely had a file that didn't defrag. Also, how does Defraggler fare? I use it ocassionally, and haven't had any issues.
Also, as far as compressing files goes, I have a 1tb drive that is almot completely full from my backed up DVDs and Blu Rays. Can I compress these files on the hard drive without damaging the quality?
Let me add a tip- if you use
Submitted by yogurt80 on Wed, 05/27/2009 - 9:49pm
Let me add a tip- if you use compressed air regularly, (as Ido), make sure you POWER DOWN YOUR STUFF FIRST!! First, if the can is shaken or inverted, the chemicals come out freezing, which could cause damage.
Second, the air is VERY FLAMABLE!! Components get very hot and can ignite! I once used air on my running projector, only to hear an ignition and have flames shoot out of the air vents, leaving charred film on the lens.
Sorry but I am just going to
Submitted by D.E. on Wed, 05/27/2009 - 9:37pm
Sorry but I am just going to skip out a number of these tips. Mostly because it involves installing more apps than I really need. Like do I really need an app to tell me which bits of software need updating-- I think I can be on top of that. =/
great article, but
Submitted by almax on Wed, 05/27/2009 - 9:06pm
These two tips I don't get,
4. Compress Your Files
9. Archive Your FilesOld school tips about optimizing limited ram have gone to the wayside due to cheap prices. Have we not yet reached the same point with hard drive space??
You linked to www.cupid.com
Submitted by Netram on Wed, 05/27/2009 - 8:20pm
You linked to www.cupid.com instead of www.cpuid.com.
Funny thing is, PCGUK did the same thing but in their printed mag :P
ha, good catch. link and
Submitted by norman on Wed, 05/27/2009 - 8:27pm
ha, good catch. link and text is fixed. thanks!-- Norm
must have been extra lonely
Submitted by willmonke on Wed, 06/03/2009 - 11:18am
must have been extra lonely when making link.
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