Well on this machine I ma on now - a Toshiba laptop four years old I am trying out 8 as an upgrade and I have it starting up with a desktop view after login just like 7 (using Stardock8) it boots from cold in max 6 seconds and shuts down in max 1 second. Nothing fancy under the bonnet an i5 430M and 8GB 1333 RAM although it does have a SanDisk Extreme SSD. Even so before it used to boot in 30 seconds and close in around 20 seconds.someone posted on another forum that his PC boots in 10 sec. Is this possible? I LOL when I read that, thinking he exaggerated abit.
really. Im surprised. Seems very fast. Must have some seriously nice Hardware to do that.
I have a samsung 840pro ssd in my laptop Samsung i7 and my reboot is 21 sec.
From Shawn's tutorial here: http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/720-restart-time.htmlGary what app are you using to get that readout please? Cos my Ivy takes forever in that POST bit too. But I only have the Z77-V board though.I think it's mostly due to the Z87 Deluxe board, it spend less time fricking around in POSTing. It also has a "Fast boot" option which I used too. I think I can do better by turning off some USB initializing too. Of course I'll post if I get a lower time.![]()
Lol, you can find earlier W7 reboot times here.nope he said boots from being off. I call BS

No worries Alan I don't doubt Lazesoft is good I was sorta generalising really and not targetting Lazesoft. I was referring more to heaps of those reg cleaners and performance enhancing crapware that a lot of folk use and wreck the machine with they are usually free and the one you use I think you said you paid for which if right gives you some comeback.There is only one active partition, system Reserved, it is 100 MB at the start of Disk 2, the SSD, used for booting Win 7.
Disk 1 has System Reserved, NOT active, part of Windows 7 before I had an SSD.
My WDC HDD had one dozen partitions before Windows trashed its GPT status,
and only the first two chunks correspond to original reality when I first restored a Macrium image of Disc 1 Windows 7 onto Disc 0 to satisfy myself that my Boot Recovery CD had adequate drivers for writing to my hardware - I did not want to wipe out my Disc 1 working installation with a recovery process that I feared could be as unreliable as Acronis.
The other three chunks on Disk 0 are entirely Windows stupidity that it is using a MBR partition table and Extended partition table that never existed when the drive was good. Windows has created a work of fiction.
It is worthy of note that my 930 GB Disk 1 started with 2 partitions without drive letters that were my 25 GB install of Windows before I had an SSD,
and Partitions D:\ and H:\ which totalled 15 GB.
After Disk 0 was trashed I created many more partitions for recovery of data from what Lazesoft recognised as one dozen GPT partitions
I am fully with you
"that as a matter of personal choice I never use the miracle fix programs that cause more problems than they are worth".
UNFORTUNATELY most of the applications that I am familiar with will only run under the horrendous "miracle fix program" that is Windows.
There are many other people that prefer Linux.
So far as I am concerned the rot set in when IBM chose that the IBM PC would use DOS instead of the superior CPM.
If however you consider Lazesoft to be an untrustworthy "Miracle Fix Program" then,
with all due respect you could not be more wrong.
I do not use Lazesoft as my GOTO "Miracle Fix Program" for each and every disaster,
and as something to use in place of a reliable, dependable, backup procedure.
But I find it priceless when the backup procedure falters.
I use Macrium Reflect to create and validate image backup files on the secondary HDD (Disk 0),
and I subsequently connect to an external eSATA HDD and use Teracopy to copy those files from Disk 0,
and to perform hash checksum validation of copying to ensure integrity.
I once suffered 50% corrupted "duplicates" when using Windows Explorer copy to an USB2 external.
My external drive is ONLY connected when I need it,
so as to protect its integrity against a Power Surge that destroys the computer;
or yet another Windows disaster that ruins everything it can touch.
NB so far as the thoughts of other people are concerned, there are quite a few other people that are more than satisfied with Lazesoft,
and I only tried it because someone on the GAOTD site recommended this a superior alternative to the Data Recovery software that was on offer that day.
Regards
Alan
