To ti je što ti je, onda...
Nisam siguran, ali bez obzira na isključeni SR pokušaj i brisanje Restore Points iz Disk Cleanup Wizard-a, pošto Vista koristi svoj sistem pravljenja "shadow copies", tako da možda i tu dobiješ nešto...
A ostatak onda ide na SP2 fajlove.
Naravno proveri i sistemski Temp folder (isprazni ga), i pregledaj da li na disku (diskovima) postoje u korenom, neki novi folderi sa čudnim, dugačkim kriptičnim nazivima?
A što se tiče pomenutog winsx foldera,
bolje ga ne diraj (BTW prikazana veličina tog foldera nije stvarna fizička veličina)!
The Secret Of Windows Vista / Windows 7 Winsxs Folder.
Takođe je interesantan i ovaj savet:
Citat:
Windows likes to write a file after each boot that can drive disk usage to sky.The size of this file varies from user to user.Some report only 10MB while others have to wait more than 10 minutes after boot for a 160MB file to be written step-by step into disk.Solution is to delete this file.It will not be created again after deletion - C:\Windows\System32\wdi\LogFiles\BootCCKL.etl
It's a logfile for Circular Kernel Context. It can be safely deleted. Don't know if this file is related to the high disk usage upon boot though.
Normally the high disk usage at boot is related to the Superfetch service.
In case of this issue, you should alter the following regkey :
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Contro l\Session Manager\Memory Management\PrefetchParameters
On the right side look for a key named: EnableSuperFetch
This decides if and how prefetch runs, here are the value and what they do:
0: Disable
1: Cache applications
2: Cache startup or bootup
3: Cache Everything
Set it to "2" and press OK.
Leave Prefetcher at default (1)
close regedit
Never disable it, that would be stupid. BUT altering it to "2" makes a hell of a difference when suffering these high disk accessing at boot.
Superfetch will then be enabled for caching the bootcycle only, and not applications, which greatly reduces the amount of data that needs to be cached upon boot. People who have the issue should see a big difference when booting up.
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unusual quintuple (5/4) time, from which its name is derived.
Take Five (1966)
Take Five by Al Jarreau 1976