I've found Windows slow for compresing fills and also renaiming files on FAT32 partitions.
Compressing files is limited by CPU; not the file system. In that case, your beef would be with something like WinZip or WinRAR, not actual Windows.
Good for you, using Gnome rather than KDE, is this for speed too? I've found KDE very slow almoast windows slow.
I've found Windows slow for compresing fills and also renaiming files on FAT32 partitions. Linux can rename a file in less than a second on my FAT32 partition but Windows takes fucking ages. But I have found the Windows boots quicker than Linux in general.
XP's ram management isn't great becuase by default it doesn't unload cached dll's in the memory. All can be changed by simple tweaks.
Gnome, is your problem caused by hard drive lag? What you described is exactly how my computer acts when I'm transfering large amounts of data across the network, or defragging.
This involved arranging the system files on the hard disk in the correct boot order on the first boot after installation or a major change to the system.
ABSOLUTE RUBBISH!!!You cannot honestly expect us to believe that mickey$loth has actually managed to properly organize system folders in a logical order, can you? Isn't that some sort of major sin as far as they're concerned or something? I thought their system fiels were supposed to be either scattered in one illogical mass of folders, or one huge mess of files dumped in one directory, with nothing even bordering on logical or organised, or even remotely sensible. And you expect me to believe that they actually have decently (or at least something pretending to approach decently) set things out for a change? Absolute bollocks. [wanders off muttering about people with silly ideas]
BootingWhen a computer boots, many things have to happen, such as the initialization of devices and a wide variety of system functions and services. Several important changes have been made in Windows XP that dramatically reduce the time it takes for this initialization process to complete.These changes include the following:Improvements to the Boot LoaderImprovements to the boot loader and to a number of key drivers have made them much faster. Registry initialization is also faster, and many manufacturers have dramatically reduced the time taken by their BIOS prior to running the operating system.I/O Can Be Overlapped with Device InitializationUsing Windows