Win 7 slower than XP?

hallstrum34

New member
Local time
2:54 PM
Messages
1
Well in my case, performance wise it's a lot slower is it normal? For example, watching videos is real choppy that I have to set its quality to low which I didn't have to do in XP. Playing games I get lower FPS compared to XP, and even browsing through my folders can be slow at times. I've looked around for possible solutions via search and found nothing. I've also installed all the drivers including latest video card ones from nvidia.com. It can probably be because of my slow ass processor or memory, which I will update in the future, but in XP it was running quite fine.
 

My Computer

OS
Windows XP Professional SP3
CPU
Intel Celeron, 2500 MHz (25 x 100)
Motherboard
Foxconn 661MX Pro
Memory
2 GB 200MHz DDRSD RAM
Graphics Card(s)
Nvidia Geforce 6800 GS (256 MB)
Screen Resolution
1280x1024
PSU
500 watts
I'd say running Win7 with only 2GB of RAM on a Celeron 2.5GHz and a barely passable nVidia video card is likely to give you slower performance when doing things that require some horsepower, yes. Remember that the XP codebase is basically from 2001, and it was based on Windows 2000 and NT4, which goes back to 1996. XP can run very well on a Celeron 2.5GHz, and 2GB of RAM is enormous for work in XP. However, it is worth remembering that XP's bare minimum requirements were a 300MHz PC and 64MB of RAM (that's right, 64MB). Your system is ~8x faster in clock speed and has 32x the minimum RAM requirement. That would mean if you did the same to Win7's bare minimums (1GHz CPU, 512MB RAM), you'd have the equivalent of an 8GHz CPU with 16GB of RAM. Your PC, especially a Celeron E3300 2.5GHz, is pretty slow.

However, the real bottleneck is likely the GeForce 6800GS you're running - given that a LOT of the visuals on Win7 have been offloaded to the GPU, running a barely-capable DX9 GPU like the 6800GS, coupled with a Celeron, is probably holding you back. The RAM is likely not an issue at all, for what it's worth - 2GB is definitely a decent amount for almost everything, and 4-6GB is the sweet spot.
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom
OS
Windows 10 Pro x64
CPU
Intel Core i7 4790K @ 4.5GHz
Motherboard
Asus Maximus Hero VII
Memory
32GB DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
Nvidia GeForce GTX970
Sound Card
Realtek HD Audio
Screen Resolution
1920x1200
Hard Drives
1x Samsung 250GB SSD
4x WD RE 2TB (RAIDZ)
PSU
Corsair AX760i
Case
Fractal Design Define R4
Cooling
Noctua NH-D15
hallstrum34, I'd suggest that you turn off Aero and all the eye candy from Win7, disable unnecessary services, and disable unnecessary items from startup and you should get a better performance from Win7 than that of XP.
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Dell Dimension 8200/Personal Build
OS
Windows XP Professional SP3/Windows 7 Ultimate x64
CPU
Intel Pentium 4 3.06GHz Northwood/Intel Core i7 3770K
Motherboard
North Bridge:Intel Tehama i850(E)/Asus P8Z77-V Deluxe
Memory
2 Gb RDRAM Dual Channel/GSkill 32GB DDR3 1866
Graphics Card(s)
ATI ALL-IN-WONDER X800 XT AGP/MSI GTX 660 Ti PE
Sound Card
Voyetra Turtle Beach Santa Cruz PCI/Onboard Realtek HD
Monitor(s) Displays
Viewsonic VP230mb ViewPanel
Screen Resolution
1600x1200 32bit
Hard Drives
Western Digital 500Gb IDE drive (main drive) (XP PC)/Samsung 512GB 840 Pro Series SSD main+Western Digital Caviar Black 2 TB SATA III 7200 RPM 64 MB Cache as 2nd internal (Win 7 PC)
PSU
Dell OEM/Thermaltake Toughpower Grand 850W TPG-850M
Case
Dell OEM/Corsair Obsidian 650DW-1 Midtower
Cooling
Dell OEM/Noctua NH-D14
Keyboard
Dell Multimedia keyboard
Mouse
Logitech Cordless MouseMan® Optical M-RM63
Back
Top