Des manières simples d'augmenter le performace de votre ordinateur - tournez classer au loin sur vos commandes locales
Signalé le 5 juillet 2007 chez 9:37 P.M.
Veillez à lire d'autres poteaux de la série de performances d'ordinateur d'augmentation !
- Manières simples d'augmenter le performace de votre ordinateur - configuration du dossier de pagination
- Manières simples d'augmenter le performace de votre ordinateur - Defragmenting votre commande dure
- Manières simples d'augmenter le performace de votre ordinateur - arrêt des programmes de démarrage !
- Manières simples d'augmenter vos performances de l'ordinateur - économiser l'espace de disque dur !
- Des manières simples d'augmenter le performace de votre ordinateur - tournez classer au loin sur vos commandes locales
- Des manières simples d'augmenter vos performances de l'ordinateur - neutralisez les effets visuels en étiquette d'options d'exécution
La rotation outre de classer sur vos commandes dures est une autre manière très simple d'amplifier vos performances de l'ordinateur. Cette option est automatiquement placée par Windows XP, mais il est très inutile. Je pense que nous avons tous avons eu l'expérience d'employer la recherche de Windows (ne pas être confondu avec la recherche de phase de Windows) pour essayer et trouver un dossier et devonss attendre 10 minutes tout en observant que reniflement stupide de chien autour de l'écran !
Ne vous inquiétez pas, en tournant outre du service d'indexation ne fera aucun dur à votre ordinateur. Vous pouvez alors demander, bon comment je suis censé rechercher quelque chose ! ? Facile, utilisation Ordinateur de bureau de Google ou Recherche d'ordinateur de bureau de Windows! Tous les deux programmes sont des années-lumière plus rapidement que la recherche régulière de Windows, ainsi c'est votre préférence si vous voulez coller avec Windows ou aller chercher le logiciel de Google, mais l'une ou l'autre manière que vous voulez certainement tourner classer au loin pour accélérer votre ordinateur !
Voici comment vous le faites : Premier, ouvert Mon ordinateur et droit-cliquez sur votre commande locale (C, D, etc.) et choisissez Propriétés

Sur Généralités étiquette, vous un checkbox au fond appelé « Permettez au service d'indexation de classer ce disque pour la recherche rapide de dossier ». Avancent et l'uncheck qu'et toi obtiendra à une zone de dialogue automatique demandant si vous voulez appliquer ces arrangements à tous les dossiers et chemises ou juste à la racine de la commande :

Allez-y et choisissez tous les dossiers et subfolders, autrement il va classer toujours tout sur la commande ! Clic OK et vous devrez reposer et attendre quelques minutes pendant que les arrangements sont appliqués à tous dossiers sur votre ordinateur. Unfortunately, every file in the file system has an attribute that tells Windows whether or not it should be indexed, so this has to to be updated for all files.

If you get any Access Denied errors along the way, just go ahead and click Ignore All because it’s probably just system files that are currently in use. Hope this was helpful!
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Well i have two questions regarding this. First one, if i was unchecking the Indexing only for the drive C. Could i use normal windows search for D drive. If so would it include the C drive too? and the second one, could it be reproducable. I mean can i check the indexing once more later?
Hi Selvan,
Good questions! Yes you can turn off indexing for each drive or partition individually. So if you uncheck the indexing for C, D would still be indexed, but would not include C.
For the second question, yes you can turn the indexing back on by following the same steps and rechecking the box in the Properties of the drive. You can do this at any time!
Hope that helps!!
I’ve a weird problem;
I’ve turned off “indexing” for the drive, but almost every new folder created is “indexed”? huh!
also I’ve never met a faster search than;
DIR /S filename.*
or
DIR /S *.ext
whatever filename or extention you’re looking for:
“wav, jpg, mp3″ etc.
it produces instant results even for files that are way up some obscure tree.
To do this, open a “DOS box” and type “cd \”
from there you do the search for whatever file(s) you want.
DIR /S *.*
will show every file on the drive except hidden / system files if you want to see those add ” /a ”
to the line, and it would look like this
DIR /S /A *.*
it can also be “Piped” and viewed later
DIR/S filename.* > search.txt
the only real use for the “indexing service” is if your PC is set up as a huge file server or web server containing a horrendous amount of files and folders, especially folders containing 10’s of thousands of files. but for the normal user it’s more hassle in wasted resources and space than it returns in performance.
Cheers
◄RfD►
Richard,
Thanks for the tips! Excellent! I appreciate the comment!
By the way, how do you know each new folder is indexed? Is the check box “For fast searching, allow indexing service to index this folder” checked?
Aseem
Aseem,
Yes, the little check box under “advanced” is usually marked with the exception of any new folder “I” create on the root level but if I dragondrop the folders from a data cd or dvd that I created on the same or another machine or extract from a .cab or .zip file, the whole lot of the folders is “serviced for indexing” and sometimes the files are also. The reason I find this out is because I work with a lot of graphic and audio files and before I open to edit I always remove the “Archive” and set the “Read Only” attributes so I’m always forced to do a “Save as” instead of possibly ruining the original. So when I find the files are “indexed” (even though I never asked for them to be) I check the folder and usually it’s also “indexed”
what a pain this can be to fix sometimes especially after unloading 10 or 12 Data DVD’s of audio files containing a ton of .wav or .mp3 files.
Are there any solutions or is it just a bug in the way “exploder” handles “outside” files?
I do know how to externally modify the “Archive” & “Read Only” attributes in one pass but not the indexing?
Attrib /s -a +r *.*
from the folder just below all of the files I want to change, marks them as stated: -”Archive” +”Read Only”
(from the DOS box this is extremely fast but will quit processing if there are any “Hidden” or “System” files within the same tree).
Cheers
◄RfD►