I'll probably take your advice and add more RAM, but I doubt it will help.
For the purpose of my tests, I intentionally had no applications running at
all, neither in the system tray, services, nor even the Gadgets panel, and
was switching to an account that was already logged in. As a matter of fact,
it takes about 40-50 seconds to just FUS to the very same account I just came
from.
Does anyone know if there's a way to monitor each process's CPU usage during
this process? The Task Manager shows me this information in real-time, but I
need to see each the information as it changes over time instead. I suppose
I could write my own, but does this already exist? The
Perfoemance/Reliability monitors don't seem to allow me to add existing
processes, just existing categories of metrics.
I'm open for suggestions. Much appreciated.
-Dan.
"E Jacob" wrote:
> "Dan Bourque" <Dan > wrote in message
> news:5FAC1585-01D9-475D-83BC-...
> > Please help. The exact same PC used to have Windows XP Pro, and FUS was
> > very
> > fast. Now that I've upgraded to Vista, FUS takes about 40 seconds just to
> > get to the account selection page. Then another 10 seconds to switch to
> > the
> > already logged in account.
> >
> > I've looked at the Performance/Reliability logs, but nothing jumps out.
> > How
> > can I figure out what's taking so long? I've tried uninstalling all
> > extraneous services, and disabled most hardware devices, but no luck.
> >
> > My machine is a Pentium 4, dual core, 3.2GHz with 1GB RAM, with a 4.3
> > Windows Experience Index. I'm running Vista Home Premium, 32-bit.
> >
> > Please, please help.
> > Cheers,
> > -Dan.
> >
>
>
> Hi Dan,
>
> You might experience delays if there are open applications in the account
> you are switching from. This is true in Windows XP as well but given Vista's
> appetite for RAM it may be the reason why it is more noticeable. Vista uses
> at least 30% of RAM just to run itself. With another user logging in,
> demands for resources will increase. Additionally Vista must maintain open
> programs in memory in case the logged off user wants to log back in.
>
> Your machine specs are quite capable but increasing the RAM will give you a
> better all around performance.
>
> I'd leave the services and hardware devices alone.
>
>
> --
>
> E Jacob
>
>