On response top original question,
you can als get a ati 4650 card, but you might be very cpu limited. two months ago i gave away a lot faster system to friends for nothing...3500+, low latency ddr2 400Mhz with proper dual channel, 4x512mb.
So if you upgrade try also to get bot channels working/balanced. It will require an extra 1gbyte dimm or the removal of 1gbyte dimm.
But what ever you do, it is very costly to make an old system perform like current systems. Better to start saving money and do a major upgrade. If lfs is all that matters... a complete system can be built that will cost about €600 which will be able to run lfs with all settings maxed out with 32 racers in view.
For just one system, it might be a lot cheaper to just openup somewere and place a fan to suck air from outside into the room. Do they same thing somewhere high in the room, but this time sucking air out of the small room.
It saves a LOT of money just having two 20cm fans instead of a airco running 24x7.
I'm not sure what the conventional hdd is the are comparing with. Usually its 5400 rpm or less which is usual for laptops, making this benchmark looking extra good for the ssd. Ssd's use also a lot less energy than normal disks. BUT with a complete system configuration, the difference is minimal. Normal desktop systems have 7200rpm and for the bootdisk it is possible to get 10K sata disk for less than half the price of a ssd. 15K disks are available too for years now, but they are not designed for desktop market and use only sas interfaces.
ssd' s are faster than conventional disks, but is it really worth the money to get windows boot faster? Unless you are on unlimited budget, the money is better spent on: cpu, memory, graphics card etc. I do recommend though not to buy a green-editions hdd's etc. Those energy saving models are a bit slower compared to regular 7200rpm disks for pc-systems. But the gained energy saving on a total system config is very small.
The harddisk is currently still the slowest part, but conventional disks have become faster too over the years AND microsoft windows vista/win7 with its pre-loading policy's makes loading of apps really fast. Starting a game which i didn't play for a long time, starts within a few seconds. call of duty 2, starts within 2 seconds, most of the time is spent by the game for detection of the hardware, disk is not 100% loaded while starting up cod2. MW2 starts within seconds, lfs within one second, firefox within one second. I have huge problems playing btf2 online however.. i kicked out on every map change, because my system loads the map faster than the server-side...
Openoffice first time start is really slow though, it takes a whopping 4 to 5 seconds to open openoffice-writer. Second time starting it takes less than one second. A SSD disk will most likely reduce these load times by about 25-40%, but best case these will be about 2 seconds and windows booting in about half the time.
For certain audio/video/photo applications it might be different. Also small databases will perform a lot better on a ssd, when using hardware designed for desktop systems. Remember right now, ssd is still 5 tot 10 times more expensive per Gbyte than conventional disks which are not really that slow. Adding more memory boosts overall system performance and makes you suffer even less from the high latency's of conventional disks.
So is it really worth your money to buy ssd just to get windows boot faster? I think not but... if you really get angry of waiting 45 seconds waiting for windows to boot after you have installed all your programs etc... than ssd will help you
You should not buy a ssd, if the consequence is you cannot afford anymore to buy at least 8gbyte of memory or have to start downgrading the graphicscard, cpu, memory with worse timings etc.
In the meantime, i wil too keep an eye on the prices of ssd' s. In the last 4 years nothing has changed though on ssd pricing compared to conventional disks but the performance of cheap ssd's are really improving over the last two years and ssd uses less energy. So maybe sometime in the future.....
vista/win7 is finally taking advantage of the extra memory for pre-loading applications and file-caching. The extra memory makes windows
look and feel a lot faster. The catch is, you should not mind windows being active on the disk for several minutes after booting. It does not affect what you are doing except if you are running benchmarks which will be 1-3% slower. But your apps will often start instantly like coming from a ram-disk. So there is not a direct visible benefit in having 8gbyte or more ram, but it makes working on a wintendo system really a bit better.
My rig:
built july 2009:
- CPU: amd phenom [email protected] (max is 3.71Ghz)
- system-board: asus M4a78T-E
- memory: 4x2gbyte corsair 1600Mhz@1333Mhz and 6-6-6-8-22-5-20-5 timings and 1,85volts
- graphics-card: club ati 5870
- soundcard: creative X-fi sound card , extreme gamer edition or something like that
- networkcard:intel pro/1000 GT
- HDD1: Western Digital RE3 Enterprise 500GB (WD5002ABYS)
- HDD2: WD Caviar Black 1TB (WD1001FALS)
- systemcase: Lian Li PC-7B with fans replaced with Enermax UC-12AEBS"warp" fans, sidepanel modded and has a antec bigboy fan20cm. However, the mod turned out to be complete useless. System did not get cooler. Topfan replaced with Enermax UC-9FAB-B, 9x9 casefan
- cpu cooler: zalman CNPS9700NT
- powersupply: Zalman ZM750-HP
- monitor: LG W2600HP
Edit: Again, finally have a ati 5870 card now
Last edited by Bluebird B B, .
Reason : a zero too many
Enzo steers in without looking and totally missed the car in his mirrors entering blindspot. So indeed, "ER enzo" is the crash driver in this case.
Being slightly ahead is NOT an excuse to steer in like there is nobody else on track. Really typical accident which causes lots of frustration, because some drivers really think everybody should move out of their way.
Also notice Time Schrick, on t1 one grrr typical maneuver causing lots of frustration. THAT is what i think what should be called dive-bombing into an corner.
hm very limited, some talk abut microsoft finally also got familiar with spinlocks etc. Indeed database-systems will go to complete halt with many users if this is not implemented.
Interesting, the claimed performance increase is at least on desktop market totally non-existent. That is win7 is often just a bit slower than vista. win7 is claimed to boot faster, by many ,than vista , it does not. It is claimed to perform better, in game-benchmarks, win7 is usually slower.
Please take note of the following very interesting sentence: "Windows Vista, which simply didn't perform very well, especially in its early days."
Looks like vista users can be very happy microsoft decided not to artificially keep the improvements away from vista
You are not naming anything at all why windows7 would be any different to vista if you look behind the gui. Just stating windows7 is out-of-the-box more up-to-date than a two year OS. Well duh.. the two-year-old version needs to be updated to get it to the current standard. Some big unix-vendors do this all the time, releasing new install-media with updated OS out-of-the-box. Only difference is, they do not claim to be releasing a new operating-system. But microsoft is, successfully, doing exactly that
edit: About directx11 questions, YES i have directx11 but not yet a directx11 card. Just as it is not necessary to have directx11 capable graphics card to install windows 7.
Not yet, planning to buy a 5870 card in about two weeks. I still have a bit doubt if i might go for a 5970 card. I don't think i would really benifit from the added performance. Making the price/performance ratio for me not very good while a 5870 is relatively cheap.
actually, it is vista that boots faster then win7, stability is unlikely to be different since the kernel, drivers etc. are exactly the same. Al crashes i got were related to too much overclocking and hardware(memory) not being able to work at rated specifications. I did try to reduce memory usage of vista, but it resulted in less performance. Since with vista, microsoft finally is using free memory efficiently for disk caching and pre-loading applications you often use. I doubt win7 is doing it differently, it might just be reporting memory usage differently. Vista/win7 really start to work well with 4+gbyte of memory because of that.
At the desktop, 1.65gbyte of memory is allocated with lots of programs and background services and 6gbyte is used for diskcaching, making my games start really, really fast. Lfs is loaded within one second. I doubt it can be done any quicker on the same hardware.
My point is, people are shouting win7 better this, that...but actually its all the same.
I do not deny the user interface of win7 is better than vista out of the box. But it is really just the userinterface.
Get vista, update it and tweak the gui to your liking and voila it works exactly as well as windows 7. So f you already have vista running and the gui tweaked, i do not think there is any advantage in upgrading. There is one though, your bankaccount will be lowered by 60 to 100 euros. BUT... in this case, your money will be better spent on two games, a concert of a great artist, new disk, clothes etc. to name a few examples.
note: using vista 64 bit since 11-2007
(one last note, i really hate microsoft, and i really hate it i have to run microsoft windows operating system. As long as microsoft has a monopoly on desktop market, i try not to get angry about it since its a waste of energy)
Not a really wel argumented post.
turnoff uac and vista and you're 90% on your way into making it really usefull. People like to forget many, many users demanded protection against themselves from microsft, that's why the awfull uac was introduced.
If you already own vista, you know what to do.
With windows7 you just get vista with a tweaked gui. Vista got blamed for being slow, but tests show windows7 is usually exaclty as fast and sometimes just a bit slower than vista.
Ugly? Did you take a good look at xp? Totally teletubby's look after default install. But people are just used to it. xp, vista and win7 need tweaking to get the gui/look and feel working like you want it yourself.
you comparision with cars is a bit odd thought, on a car you get lots of different parts making it often different to drive.
Try again, name me some real advantages of win7 over vista, not in terms of awfull, ugly etc.
i can name one: after default install there is less gui tweaking needed in win7 which saves time. But is that really enough to spent money to migrate from vista to win7? I personally rarely have to reinstall windows. Average is at least 3-4 years and by that time the systems are outdated, sold of given to friends. So i would be spending time and money for ... what? What is the advantage over vista? What can i do better in win7 than in vista?
I assume lfs won't be available in 64-bit version anytime soon?
edit:
Curious why some people want to move from vista to win7. Its exactly the same operating system, but the gui and frontend has been tweaked in win7 that' s all;vista+updates=win7. Just like W2K and XP, but the difference in case of vista/win7 is even smaller. So why move to win7 and spent money for a new license? What is the big advantage in it?
Your powersupply has nothing today with powermanagement. I mean the powermangament savings in bios and what windows is doing and what is configured in windows. If something goes wrong, you might get weird performance.
note: 500watt powersupply is not much for your system configuration.
Its crucial to update your drivers of your chipset and check if a newer firmware for your motherboard will give fixes/improvements. If not, do not flash your motherboard, since flashing a bios is always relatively risky operation.
The hyprlinks link to screenshots in 150x85 pixels, that is eh small...
it going to need some serious trouble shooting, there is not a direct good explanation why you get such poor performance on your system.
Small list to try to take a look at:
- weird power-management
- overheating cpu
- firmware version motherboard
- virus/spyware
- anti-virus/anti spyware
- drivers chipset, soundcard, networkinterface
- accidentally onboard graphics card enabled("hybride mode")
- check event viewer(eventvwr) windows
- directx version
- Install vista/7 64 bits If you have a license for it
Little test with "limit fps = off"
I use fixed aa at 4x @1920x1200and do not have any of your described problems. It takes a full grid of drivers to get the fps down to 50fps(minimal value) at south city AND external view. Difference in image quality between 4x anti-aliasing and 8x is minimal. Also it looks like fps is cpu limited(eh core limited), not graphics card, because going from 0x anti-aliasing and 0x texture filtering to maximum values(8x and 16) makes no difference in fps. it did notice turning texture filtering down does have a very negative impact on image quality.
adative AA, i dont know what it does exactly, i thought it was to reduce AA in areas where it is not needed to gain performance. With a ati 4890 card i don't see any use for that in lfs. Your other point, ugly trees in the distance?? Are you using a 40 inch monitor? that is an optimization from lfs, lowering details. I did try to see ugly trees in the distance on my own system.. it looks normal to me It might be a problem you enable adative anti aliasing, but in lfs it is configured to be fixed. Try disabeling adaptive anti aliasing and for other the settings:"let application decide" in CCC.
note: your screenshots are way too small to see anything at all.
Also 67-69 celcius is normal for graphics cards You can improve this by setting a fixed fan speed. On my system 37-40% fan-speed is needed to get the temperature down by about 10 degrees. But it makes more noise so i have it set back to auto-mode.
So my opinion stays: you blame the hardware for a problem which is not hardware related Well at least not the graphics card OR the graphics card is broken, in which case you can get it back to the shop and have it repaired under warranty. However it is very unlikely a malfunctioning graphics cards gives the behavior you are describing.
Why don't you enable fixed anti-aliasing? 4x mode will improve image quality a lot.
The issues you are having are NOT graphics card related. 4890 or a high end nvidia card should both give 200-400 fps with all settings maxed out in lfs. You are blaming your graphics card while the graphics card is not causing your problems.
"- Users\Public or Users\<current user> for Vista and W7."
Is not a good path!!
Just under program files or a separate folder on the disk. Not somewhere within the userprofiles. user-profiles are not intended to install software in!
YES, the subject- is correct, avg 9.0 does minimize LFS. I have too this problem since version 9.0.
Close the avg-taksbar icon to get rid of this problem. Must be done via task-manager since avg 9.0 does not have a simple option to exit it. (or i didn't find it yet)
60-100mbyte. Lfs reports at my system 66 to 100 mbyte texture memory is used. For todays standards that is very little of texture memory needed.
lfs uses in total about 350-400mbyte.
This is with all grapghics settings maxed out.
average graphicscard has 512MB or more memory
average dekstop/tower system has 4096MB or more memory .