I just purchased an 8GB Extreme III class 10 card to dedicate to ReadyBoost for my Asus U81a. Presently I have added a 500GB 7200.4 Seagate and extra apps are Office 2007 H&S Visual Studio 2008 Express (VB, Web, C#, C++), Live Mail, MSSE and Expression Web. Also CPUz, SiSandra and other various system monitoring tools.
Now I am a bit dissapointed with the new card as with HDTune I only get about 19 MB/s read. My previous Ultra II 8GB got 17 MB/s read but this could be a limit of my internal reader. I can say the writes looking at the Resource monitor have sped up though.
It appears with RB though you don't get the benefits until the application cache builds. From what I can tell this happens after you launch the first application of say IE. Once this builds though there is a huge performance increase opening apps for the first time.
Once built the apps open almost at the same pace they would once loaded to cache and after closing opening a second time without RB. Over all the system responds much nicer but I doubt it is an improvement that will show up in any benchmark.
One thing I did notice with the Resource Monitor is that all files that were being hit to the SDHC drive had a total responce time of 1/3 or less for the transfer sizes/speed. So whatever Win7 is caching there seems to work well. I dedicated the entire 8GB but I somehow doubt it uses anywhere near that.
While this is no SSD by a long shot with Win7 once RB is loaded up it seems to be a worth while upgrade even on a 4GB ram system. I understand from reading other posts it was useless on Vista once you got to the 4GB mark.
Eventually I will go SSD but I am waiting for prices to come down a bit, well allot, and for the Trim and all stuttering issues to be resolved and/or more mature. One nice thing about ready boost, no stuttering issues. Now I just have to see how long the SDHC card will last........![]()
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usapatriot Notebook Nobel Laureate
I wish you would have asked about this before buying that memory card. ReadyBoost is really not very effective at all unless you have very little RAM. It's kind of pointless since you already have 4GB.
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Readyboost pretty much only speeds up reads from the pagefile. Which isn't all that much if your got plenty of RAM.
Now if I could only buy more RAM to speed up my time in traffic..... -
davepermen Notebook Nobel Laureate
have you both read his post? he states that he has quite some gains from it. that was not a question, that was a .. dunno, mini-review?
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usapatriot Notebook Nobel Laureate
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Nay-say'ers aplenty here. There is a gain, no placebo effect. Specifically I looked for one before posting this. There seems to be no gain though until ReadyBoost loads. this is event driven from what I've seen so far.
If at first boot you load again IE then RB seems to start loading up. You can even see this happening with Resource Monitor watching the RB drive. Once loaded up you can definately see the improvements first opening applications.
Now if at first boot you open those applications before RB loads there is no, and I repeat NO, speed improvement first opening those same programs. This is unlike a SSD that has the speed improvements immediately realized.
Now once you have loaded a program with or without RB it loads from ram cache and you will notice very little to no difference at all. So I can see where some people have tried RB and truely believe everyone else is just experiencing a placebo effect. You have to realize what it does and look for when it does it.
I am an old timer when it comes to PC's and look for any benefits I can. I am a realist too and know this specific benefit, at least for now, is worth it to me. I now realize too it's limitations and the fact it isn't always showing any benefit at all. So it is no miracle cure for a slow HDD but it has its place even in a 4GB system.
If you want to be a Nay-Say'er do what I did, enable it. from a fresh boot start Resource Monitor, sort files by name to watch your RB drive, open IE and wait for the activity of the RB drive to stop and then open say VB or even office. It will load exceptionally faster that it would after first boot without RB. subsequent opening of the same programs though are the same speed as they are now ram cached from the drives............. -
I have to add an update. I finally booted with resource monitor and waited a bit. Not sure yet of the time it took but I waited and watched and RB finally built the cache on its own without an event loading it.
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jackluo923 Notebook Virtuoso
You can also try out eboostr. Using readyboost and eboostr together makes the computer much more responsive than readyboost alone.
On my netbook, readyboost+ eboostr + one of the fastest 5400rpm hdd is night and day difference compared with with HDD alone. -
From restarts or cold boots, RB takes about 5 minutes to fill my 2GB SD card from whenever it decides to start loading the card up, anyway. The only reason I even use it is because I have a spare SD card I keep in the slot to keep dust out of it.
Sometimes, things seem slower if I remove it, sometimes. I've used it from the start so I'm used to the benefits and probably don't notice them now >.> -
davepermen Notebook Nobel Laureate
one thing that worries me: why does it build up the cache after a restart? i thought it should be filled from the start to show gains while/directly after booting?
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I tried out demo and wasn't impressed with ebooster. I might have been if I used the ram also as the default wanted too but I like my ram being free........
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davepermen Notebook Nobel Laureate
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davepermen Notebook Nobel Laureate
doublepost
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I've been using a 30MB/sec Memory Stick in my Sony laptop (the one benefit of that stupid proprietary standard).
I don't have time to dig up the thread I posted on the Sony board now, but if you search you'll find it. I posted an article in there about RB being much better in Win 7 than Vista.
I haven't done any monitoring with resmon yet, but I do notice that the stick is accessed often, even though I have 4gb RAM. Obviously it's doing something. Also, my RAM usage is usually 33% or so. Unlike Vista, Win 7 doesn't utilize as much RAM as possible. -
It definitely helps with my desktop at work! The first noticeable difference is the hard drive isn't accessing constantly.
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It is no miracle cure and I do see here a speed increase in boot times but YMMV. at 16GB unless you use most of it up all the time RB may show little to no benefit. That is unless you use alot of different apps all the time. Another example where it could help is where you do alot of project codeing on large and varied locally stored projects.
Just remember RB is to speed up drive (read) access so a good size SSD instead is probably a better option for your monster.............
Edit;
Also rememeber the faster the HDD is the less benefit you realize in having RB enabled. I noticed there is less overal improvement with the system using the 7K500 than the 7200.4 but there still is a slight improvement but not as big.......... -
jackluo923 Notebook Virtuoso
I find a combination of readyboost + eboostr (4 beta) to be the best -
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If your notebook can support dual HDD/SSDs, the most cost effective solution is a small 32-64GB SSD and a 640-1TB HDD...
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I tried readyboost and it actually slowed down my computer.
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Technically Ready Boost is a piece of code(Windows Services Actually) that needs to be loaded meaning it takes up system resources as well.
If your com is sufficiently powerful with enough RAM readyboost is redundant.
Not to mention mem cards and stick should be put to better use like storing real data. -
On an older laptop with a 5200 RPM drive or even 4200 RPM drive RB makes alot of sense. As always though YMMV............ -
5200RPM is a weird number. -
jackluo923 Notebook Virtuoso
Some of the WD green hdd are 5200rpm i think
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It is a mixed bag but RB with HDD's does have some, if not limited, benefits. I think (my best guess) if there were a WD 640GB 10,000 RPM drive with say 64 MB cache short stroked on the primar drive then RB returns would be negligable.......... -
jackluo923 Notebook Virtuoso
There would also be some cases where RB would make sense on even the 7k500. E.g. when the hdd is under stress, RB will improve the responsiveness of the computer overall. When the hdd is busy doing other things, the latency could go up as high as 30ms. If you had readyboost cache, the latency would still be very low for some of the critical system files.
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jackluo923 Notebook Virtuoso
In that case, you should probably try out eboostr 4 beta. Use ram as your cache. It's probably 10x faster than the fastest SSD and it has lower latency. Eboostr will cache frequently used files thus boosting the performance of the computer dramatically. Remember to prioritize the programs cached in eboostr if you decide to use it.
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http://forum.notebookreview.com/showthread.php?t=448208&highlight=readyboost
Article talking about RB being much better in Win 7 http://go.notebookreview.com/?id=525X832&url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.connectedinternet.co.uk%2F2009%2F09%2F03%2Fwindows-7-readyboost-really-boosts%2F
Like I said, my system is using the 3gb+ I set aside for Readyboost. My RAM usage is usually around 33%, so clearly Windows isn't using much RAM for Superfetch, and even if it did, all that would vanish as soon as I played a game. -
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tilleroftheearth Wisdom listens quietly...
I tried eBoostr beta around August of last year when Beta 4 was first announced. I was stunned by its effect on the feel/performance of the computer. I am still using the latest beta and also running a 7K500 too.
Back in August, I tried the v3 and was disappointed (relative to beta v4) and never tried it since, but I did test RB, eBoostr, RB + eBoostr and found with my 16GB Lexar SSD ExpressCard (worst purchase ever, this card is so slow) that only eBoostr by itself made my VAIO the fastest (with a Scorpio Blue 500GB drive at the time and Win 7).
I haven't tested to see if RB + eBoostr will be an improvement on the Hitachi 7K500 yet, but will certainly try it based on what I have read here.
TANWare, eBoostr is superior to RB because it doesn't have to build the cache file each time it boots (takes over an hour on my Lexar ExpressCard for 90% filled of 15,268KB). You really should try it and give it a fair test (one week should do it - leave the computer running while you're not using it so that it can collect and build the cache as large as possible).
What I would not recommend is using RAM as eBoostr's cache. Although 'benchmarks' will show its the fastest, it isn't in real life. I've tested this as well on my 8GB VAIO and my VRaptor/3xRaptor desktops. The fastest overall speed increase is to use a USB key (or ExpressCard SSD, like I am on the VAIO) exclusively.
This works so good that it gave better results than an Torqx SSD (when I was still using the Scorpio Blue). And it continues to work great and allows me to save my money/bide my time for an SSD that is capacious and speedy/dependable enough to upgrade to. Like the Intel 320GB SSD we're all waiting for.
I'll try to test RB + eBoostr in the next couple of days and report back if the latest beta version works better with RB than it did back in August last year.
Cheers!
See:
http://forum.notebookreview.com/showthread.php?t=435052
Cheers! -
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Thanks tiller. I have been trying to find out if eboostr rebuilds its cache every time you reboot but they don't supply that information.
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jackluo923 Notebook Virtuoso
While using my quadcore desktop with 3 hdds and 4GB of ram, using eboostr's ram cache made light and day difference for me. I use a combination of SD card cache, ram cache as well as readyboost on my acer aspire one netbook and it made a light and day difference as well.
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tilleroftheearth Wisdom listens quietly...
No doubt that your M6400 is faster than my VAIO!
But eBoostr with your ExpressCard SSD should enhance your performance even more.
Just want to point out that CS4 opens with 3 suites of plugins for me - is yours 'clean'?
Cheers! -
tilleroftheearth Wisdom listens quietly...
It will periodically update itself (as I'm sure you know) while your computer is idle - try to not interrupt it when it does.
To me, eBoostr is giving a hint of what Intel's Braidwood is promising (based on, but nothing like the old Turbo Memory) and the best thing is that we can use it now while waiting to see how good Intel will implement their version.
I've said it before: if I was Intel, I would buy eBoostr now!
Cheers! -
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eBoostr is mainly faster than just RB as it can use dedicated ram for cache. eBoostr without using ram for me seemed to have no real benefit when I tried it out.
If you have an SSD though RB is a waist but eBoostr may help but really how much faster do you need than an SSD? -
tilleroftheearth Wisdom listens quietly...
Lol...
How much faster? Much Faster!
See:
http://forum.notebookreview.com/showthread.php?t=436882&highlight=The+SSD+Myth+Exposed
Here is how using RAM for eBoostr degraded my overall performance:
See:
http://forum.notebookreview.com/showthread.php?t=435052
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davepermen Notebook Nobel Laureate
just kidding.
then again, no. in my cases, it never delivered, and had repeatable data-loss bugs (hard reset a machine and the last saved file changes where lost). no thanks -
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davepermen Notebook Nobel Laureate
well, it was a layer between os and hdd, and created some indirection delays.. no clue exactly. but anyways, i hate such layers, especially from third parties. unreliable
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jackluo923 Notebook Virtuoso
Windows 7 & ReadyBoost
Discussion in 'Windows OS and Software' started by TANWare, Jan 4, 2010.