Show Us Your WEI [4]


  1. Posts : 53,364
    Windows 10 Home x64
       #1661

    Should help your battery life too

    A Guy
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 20,583
    Win-7-Pro64bit 7-H-Prem-64bit
       #1662

    Cool I didn't think about that :)
    I was just hoping for more pep and less heat production which it did that nicely :)
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 26,869
    Windows 11 Pro
       #1663

    A lot of the restart times are dependent on the Motherboard. I have never had a restart time under 30 seconds. But, the majority of that was POST time. I timed it once from the time I saw the 'Windows loading' screem. I was on the desktop in about 8 or 9 seconds, I believe. The batch file everyone uses counts POST which we have little to no control over and neither does the SSD.
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 20,583
    Win-7-Pro64bit 7-H-Prem-64bit
       #1664

    Ha I was under the impression the start time started from the moment you power up and minus the actual entering the password bit then the fully loaded desktop/ and what ever is on the startup list
    Which the old hdd was allot slower but didn't see exactly what the startup time was but it was noticeably allot slower than now,
    Loving clean installs makes it allot more straight forward than cloning.....
    No bugs transferring which I found quite a few during preparation for transfer I was not liking :/

    But yea from login to desktop is extremely faster :)
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 26,869
    Windows 11 Pro
       #1665

    The hard drive/SSD has nothing to do with the POST time. After Post, when you see the first loading windows screen is the first time the SSD has anything to do with start up. At least that's what I think. POST is up to the BIOS. My Asus Motherboard is extremely slow for some reason. I had an Asrock board that from the time I pushed restart until I was back on a fully functional desktop was 23 seconds. I think the fastest time I have seen with this board was 30 seconds.
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 9,600
    Win 7 Ultimate 64 bit
       #1666

    essenbe said:
    The hard drive/SSD has nothing to do with the POST time. After Post, when you see the first loading windows screen is the first time the SSD has anything to do with start up. At least that's what I think. POST is up to the BIOS. My Asus Motherboard is extremely slow for some reason. I had an Asrock board that from the time I pushed restart until I was back on a fully functional desktop was 23 seconds. I think the fastest time I have seen with this board was 30 seconds.
    You are correct that POST times are up to the BIOS (and UEFI, which replaces BIOS). My Asus P9X79 WS MOBO is also slow to post, especially compared to the BIOSes on my notebooks. Adding insult to injury, my HBA card (it gives me 8 more SATA III ports) also has to boot up its own BIOS (and it takes its own sweet time doing so) and the Marvel chips have to boot up their own BIOS. Once the OS starts to load, everything becomes lightning fast.

    Although I haven't timed it, my current notebook boots up in about 20-30 seconds, including the time it takes to POST and for me to type in my password (and I type slowly).
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 20,583
    Win-7-Pro64bit 7-H-Prem-64bit
       #1667

    Well I am using uefi and wasn't before on this laptop so possibly that showed the most improvement besides a cleaner startup list
    Good info
      My Computer


  8. Posts : 26,869
    Windows 11 Pro
       #1668

    Good on you, Mike.
      My Computer


  9. Posts : 1,653
    Windows 10 Pro. EFI boot partition, full EFI boot
       #1669

    essenbe said:
    A lot of the restart times are dependent on the Motherboard. I have never had a restart time under 30 seconds. But, the majority of that was POST time. I timed it once from the time I saw the 'Windows loading' screem. I was on the desktop in about 8 or 9 seconds, I believe. The batch file everyone uses counts POST which we have little to no control over and neither does the SSD.
    Are you doing a EFI boot and EFI formatted boot partition on a GPT disk? That makes a big difference. The post handoff to Windows is much faster. That is one thing you can do to improve post a lot. It helps to have a a GOP/EFI compatible VBIOS on your video card though, or you have to use CSM mode which is not a full EFI boot. Most video card vendors will supply you one if you ask. Brought mine down form 20-30s to 16s.

    UEFI (Unified Extensible Firmware Interface) - Install Windows 7 with

    https://www.happyassassin.net/2014/0...lly-work-then/

    GPT/EFI It is a completely different disk format and layout, and a completely different boot loader than MBR/BIOS. You do not have to reinstall windows from scratch, you can convert from MBR/BIOS to GPT/EFI from a backup of your windows partition:

    How to Restore an MBR System image to UEFI/GPT (Convert, GPT, MBR, Restore)

    that is what I did.
    Last edited by GeneO; 18 Dec 2014 at 00:14.
      My Computer


  10. Posts : 26,869
    Windows 11 Pro
       #1670

    Thanks Gene, I have never done a UEFI install, but we are getting more and more questions about it here. My next install, I may try one just to get some experience with it and gain a little more knowledge about it.
      My Computer


 

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