Posted by
abhi2810
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
 
                                                    Microsoft                            has chosen a completely different path for XP and it's                            boot features by trying to incorporate as much support                            for newer fastboot BIOSes that are on most current motherboards.                            They built XP in such a way as to make it able to take                            advantage of features in these new BIOSes, and one of                            the coolest things is a small application called bootvis.                            bootvis.
Bootvis                            watches everything that loads at boot time, from the                            moment the OS begins to load just after POST (Power                            On Self-Test) to the moment you get to a usable Desktop.                            Some programs, most notably Norton AntiVirus 2002, suck                            up valuable seconds before you can actually DO anything                            even though you're at the Desktop. bootvis generates                            a trace file that you load and can then "see"                            a visual representation of what's happening. Every file,                            driver, hard drive read/write, etc., is recorded. You                            can then use bootvis to optimize the loading of files                            during the boot sequence. bootvis will rearrange the                            ways these very files are stored on the hard drive,                            thereby improving the boot time dramatically. 
 
 
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