The Notebook Review forums were hosted by TechTarget, who shut down them down on January 31, 2022. This static read-only archive was pulled by NBR forum users between January 20 and January 31, 2022, in an effort to make sure that the valuable technical information that had been posted on the forums is preserved. For current discussions, many NBR forum users moved over to NotebookTalk.net after the shutdown.
Problems? See this thread at archive.org.

    Another Throttlestop question

    Discussion in 'ASUS Gaming Notebook Forum' started by Speculation, Jul 15, 2011.

  1. Speculation

    Speculation Newbie

    Reputations:
    0
    Messages:
    9
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    5
    Id like to move this to my start menu so it turns on when i boot up. I have it set to auto exit at 5 but no idea how to put it in the start folder or to turn off the usercontrol warning on it. Thanks you your input.
     
  2. FlyingFalcon

    FlyingFalcon Notebook Evangelist

    Reputations:
    52
    Messages:
    395
    Likes Received:
    2
    Trophy Points:
    30
    A noob question... Does throttlestop work for the 740qm processor?
     
  3. Kingpinzero

    Kingpinzero ROUND ONE,FIGHT! You Win!

    Reputations:
    1,439
    Messages:
    2,332
    Likes Received:
    6
    Trophy Points:
    55
    @Speculation: go into TS folder, create a shortcut, then drag it on start orb-> all programs -> run at startup folder (or something along the lines).

    Windows create an auto run folder already in all programs, so just drop the shortcut there.

    @FlyingFalcon: yes it does. Just launch it and keep it running. Or add the line ExitTime=value (it can be anything you want, in seconds, like =2 or 5) and drop a shortcut in the run at startup folder as i said above. TS doesnt need to stay open all the time, it just need one launch. Therefore the exit time command turns helpful.
     
  4. dam718

    dam718 Notebook Enthusiast

    Reputations:
    9
    Messages:
    30
    Likes Received:
    0
    Trophy Points:
    15
    If you head to the ThrottleStop Guide and scroll down to the second post on the first page of the thread, there is a nice explanation of how to do what you're trying to do (have ThrottleStop start up automatically).

    I used this method and it works fantastic. Something else I did which I would recommend is go into the ThrottleStop Options and select "Start Minimized" and "Minimize on Close" under the Miscellaneous section.

    If you follow the guide to start ThrottleStop automatically, and select those two options, every time you log in to your PC ThrottleStop will load automatically and run in the system tray. If you open it, even if you click the X to close it will still run in the system tray, so your computer is always running OC'd.