Gidday Nigel
Ok Ratbag, been mucking around with the internet etc and so far there is a noticeable speed improvement
Checked the virtual memory settings and they were at double the RAM ie set at 8192MB when my ram is 4GB, so changed them as per your instructions.
Seems to be all good.
Very good to hear, mate.
Don't run OPTIMISE very much. Once every 3-6 months is fine. If you aren't making major changes to your computer often, then 6-9 months.
I run DEFRAG on all our computers about once a week. Sometimes more often if a major update; upload a swag of images; that sort of thing.
It is specially important to DEFRAG your SYSTEM partition (or HDD) regularly. At least weekly. This takes almost no time if done regularly.
Now another question: I have recently bought a new modem/router combo (TP Link) and it intermittently drops out and needs re-starting. Any suggestions why this should be so? When I was with Telstra using their modem and a separate Belkin router it happened regularly, about every 3 days, then when I switched to iinet using their modem with the Belkin it was perfect. Now I have switched to Telechoice and bought the TP-Link as its not locked to any comm's company and I'm having problems again.
Basically, I use Telstra. Not that I haven't had some monumental problems with some services from time to time, but at least they
try to make good (They have refunded us well over $2,500 in the last 5 years due to these problems). Their services also work pretty much everywhere it's possible for them to work.
We have Cable v3 here (Ultimate Cable; Cable Extreme; whatever ... ), and get a measured download speed of 113 Mbps, upload (throttled) of 2.54 Mbps.
A good friend was paying for ADSL2 with Optus and complained about his 2.5 Mbps download speed. They informed him that this was normal! Thieving mongrels, that's less than half the speed one gets with ADSL1!!. One of the advantages of being old(er ... ) is that one tends to either know people, or know who to talk to. He rang a friend in Sydney who works for Optus, and lo and behold, his ADSL speed miraculously increased to 13.5 Mbps download ...
As for your problem. Check the wall socket, the cable modem/ADSL modem phone line socket and try a different Ethernet cable.
A modem/router is just another (dedicated) computer. When you reboot it, turn the power off for a timed 20 seconds. It is probably a problem with your modem/router, but it can be a dodgy Ethernet cable or connection just as easily.
Some modem/routers have a very limited NAT table size (Network Address Translation). There is no way around a modem/router that is limited in this way other than to reboot it occasionally. The reboot clears the NAT, which is what would most likely be caused the flaky connection. The NAT table has to hold the IP addresses of things like DNS servers (Domain Name Server), and DHCP servers (Dynamic Host Protocol Protocol), as well as the IP addresses of any site you visit.
Our modem/router wireless acts up occasionally (about every 3-4 weeks). This has both our phones and my laptop connected to it. All the rest of the computers and other devices on our network are connected Gigabit Ethernet through three or so gigabit switches.
Thanks for the help so far ratbag, just wish I could repay the favour.
Mate, no worries. I am sure that you can repay someone else ... It's called a "Chinese obligation" - a debt that can never be repaid to the creditor ... I have heaps of them that I owe, so I'm repaying them by helping you ... And it's my pleasure to be able to do so, and actually make a positive difference ...
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