Open up your control panel. Click on “power options”. Are you on power saver mode? Click on “change plan settings” for whichever setting you’re on, then click “change advanced power settings”. Open up “processor power management” and check what the minimum and maximum are set to. Chances are, if you were on power saver mode, your processor was running at 5 to 50% of capacity :smack:
Hmmmmm. I have a Vista laptop at home that is running unreasonably slowly, and I have as of yet been unable to determine exactly why. I’ll check this when I get home tonight! Thanks!
Well, if you’re on a laptop, you might want to keep it on power saver mode anyway, for battery life. I have noticed Illustrator (horrible memory-hogging program btw) running noticeably smoother, though. It’s like a surprise upgrade!
Edit: Vista’s not that bad, really. It’s a little unnecessarily flashy and a bit too resource-intensive but given a choice between Vista and any Windows before XP I’ll gladly take Vista.
My minimum processor power is 100%! For some reason, that makes me feel good.
I’m not too happy with Vista, mainly because it tells me I don’t have administrative privileges to do things, even though I am the only user on the PC (and it even says I’m an admin on the user profile)!!! I would go back to XP if I could, and ME were some some of the saddest days of my life.
should changing to high performance cause my fan to start running a bit louder? It’s a fairly new HP Slimline. The fan is loud enough already but it seems a little worse now.
YMMV of course:
In general, the behavior you are experiencing is not unusual.
When you change the upper limit on utilization, you are doing something similar to taking a governor off of an engine. You are letting it run at a higher performance level, and thus heat, than you have been used to it running at. Depending on your system, the extra heat may not be taken away quickly by the current cooling system, and the fan is responding by pumping more air through the case in an attempt to keep your system running within temperature thresholds.
There are a few things that you could do to prevent the fan from spinning faster and louder. However, all the ones I can think of right now either involve tinkering with the actual hardware, or messing with BIOS settings. Both of which can cause permanent damage to your system.
Please note: the power settings you’re looking at refer to the electrical power used by the processor, not “brain” capacity, as it were. So it doesn’t need 100% as a minimum - it’s probably not using it. The voltage your CPU needs depends on how much it’s thinking.
So, crank the max to 100% but leave the minimum at 5%. Otherwise you’re wasting electricity and overheating your processor without need.
Getting a cooler base (built in aluminum, not plastic) can work well. Ideally it should feel like metal when you touch it (you know, cold), otherwise the paint or anodization is just too thick and it won’t be very good at its job. I’ve had several and the one that worked best was sold as a base for lifting monitors, it’s flat with holes rather than rugged (the ones with the serrated profile may be great at dissipating heat but they’re not taking it in from the laptop very well). It also put my laptop too high to use its keyboard, but at home I use a full-size keyboard anyway so this wasn’t a problem for me.
A bit of google would have brought you joy a long time ago.
Click Start, type msconfig, press enter.
Click Tools tab, scroll down to “Disable UAC” and select Launch.
Reboot and you are running everything as Administrator.
Of course, you’re pretty much wiping out one of the major benefits to Vista, but it’s your machine.
Unbefreakinglievable! Thank you, FlyingRamenMonster! I fully admit that I am a Luddite but several other non-Vista-using people couldn’t figure out why my newish laptop was so damn slow. Now it’s like I have a whole new laptop and life is good!
Where do I find “Processor power management”? My choices are “additional settings”, “hard disk”, “wireless adapter settings”, “sleep”, “USB settings”. “power button and lid”, “PCI express”, “Search and indexing”, “display”, and “multimedia settings”.
If you are the only person using the machine, what exactly is the major benefit of having something that makes it harder to use the machine the way you want to? For a network in an office or other business, limiting user ability to mess with the machine and/or system makes sense and is a benefit. For a single user at home, “benefit” is not how it is usually described. :dubious: