Trim Down Windows to the Bare Essentials
Posted by Adam Pash at 3:00 AM on April 2, 2008

When you're installing Windows in a virtual machine or on old, slow hardware, you want the leanest, meanest and fastest-running configuration possible. Most of the time, you want the best from your operating system, including all the bells and whistles. Other times, you don't want the default, bloated Windows installation, with every single built-in feature slowing you down. Luckily, whether you want to put Windows on a diet in a virtual machine or you want to get Windows up and running all snappy-like on older hardware, you've got a handful of excellent and free options at your disposal. Let's take a look at a few ways to trim down your Windows installation so that it takes up less space on your hard drive and eats less RAM while it's running.
What's the Point?
There are a lot of reasons you might be interested in lightening up and streamlining a Windows installation. I happen to want a super-lightweight version of Windows to run on VMWare Fusion on my Mac, so I can run my must-have Windows applications without allocating a lot of hard drive space or memory to the virtual machine. That means that the virtual machine will run more quickly and take up fewer resources on my Mac. On the other hand, a lightweight Windows install is also perfect for older hardware that just can't keep up with XP. In fact, your hardware doesn't even have to be that bad to still enjoy benefits of this process. A slimmed down Windows install is also appealing for the performance gains it affords, because it allows your computer to allocate more memory and resources to individual programs rather than the operating system as a whole.
Whatever your reasons for wanting a lightweight Windows install, I'm going to focus on a couple of methods for shrinking Windows XP below. In my examples I'll be explaining how I used the freeware applications nLite and GameXP to optimise my Windows installation for fast performance in a limited environment, like a VMWare virtual machine.
Build a Lightweight Windows Install with nLite
Freeware Windows application nLite goes directly into your Windows installation disc and helps you selectively rip out all the features and software you don't want. When you're done (and you can be pretty ruthless), you'll have a new Windows installation disc that you can use to install the lighter, gutted version of Windows. Out of all of the options discussed in this feature, the nLite method will probably give you the best results. Before we dive in, here's what you'll need: - A Windows installation disc
- nLite
- A computer running Windows to run the nLite wizard and create your new install disc
On the next screen on the installation wizard, nLite will ask you to point it to the location of your Windows installation disc. If you've got a disc in your drive, point it there. Next nLite will ask you to pick a folder on your hard drive to save the stripped install files to.
Once you've pointed nLite to all the right places, click Next to copy all the files from your disc onto your hard drive. Once nLite finishes copying the Windows installation files to the folder you selected on your hard drive (which will take a few minutes), the fun begins.
The next window you'll see is the nLite Presets window, which you can use to replicate a previous nLite session so you can re-create a slimmed-down disc without going through the work of manually selecting the components you want to remove. For example, you could copy everything I've done by grabbing my Last Session.ini file (created after you use nLite) containing all the tweaks I made when streamlining XP for VMWare and importing it at the Presets window (pictured) of the nLite wizard. Then, instead of going through all the settings yourself, you could choose my presets file, click Next, accept everything on the Task Selection pane as-is, and click through all the windows until you've created the new installation disc.
NOTE: I'm not including my Last Session.ini file because I haven't been able to test it sufficiently, and I'd hate to spread around a broken version of Windows to everyone.
If you don't want to go with a preset, you can make all the changes you want to at the Task Selection window. At this window, you green light everything you want to include or remove from the installation. For example, if your installation CD currently only includes XP Service Pack 1, you could integrate the SP2 update directly into your nLite disc. Likewise, you can integrate any hotfixes (like the revised Daylight Saving Time hotfix) or drivers into your installation.
For our purposes, however, the important part comes in the Remove section. Whatever your preferences for the rest, be sure to green light the Remove Components section. When you're happy with your Task Selection choices, click Next. The nLite wizard will now walk you through each green-lighted feature. For example, if you chose to integrate a service pack, you'll need to point nLite to the downloaded service pack.
Assuming you chose to remove components, you'll eventually come to the Components step of the nLite wizard. In this step, you choose what components of the Windows installation you want to exclude. You can be brutal in this section, but keep in mind that disabling some components can cripple some Windows features.
To help you rip out as many components as possible while ensuring you don't break any important features, nLite has a Compatibility option that allows you to check important features that you want to keep intact.
For example, I want to make sure my lightweight Windows install can still access the internet, so I've ticked the DHCP functionality (Ethernet and Wi-Fi). Since I'm going the merciless route while slimming my install disc with nLite, I'm selecting just a few compatibility options (as seen in the screenshot.) After choosing those options, I'm going through the Components list and checking off most components I'm not expecting to use—which is most of them—for removal.
This part can take some time, but the nLite wizard does a nice job of informing you of what each component does and what may be affected if you remove it. You can remove most of the components without ever noticing, but keep an eye out when you're going through the list.
Once you've set up your components for removal, click Next to advance to the next step. You'll see different steps depending on what options you gave the green light to earlier, like system tweaks. Here you can conduct all sorts of simple system tweaks that can help with your performance. For example, check out the Performance options for various tweaks. Likewise, you can save on performance overhead by tweaking options in the Visual Effects section. Some, like disabling window animations, can boost performance, while others are more a matter of taste.
Like the Components section, you may want to spend a few minutes deciding what you prefer in this section. Don't stress too much about these choices, though, as none of them should really make anything go wrong with your install.
Finally, if you're happy with all the tweaks you've made so far, click Next to start building your new, streamlined Windows installation. nLite may take some time to extract and create the new, slim, and trim installation files and ISO (which is just the disc image you burn to a CD), but when this process completes, you'll have a streamlined version of Windows that will run in either your virtual machine or your old hardware with ease.
Speed Up Your New Windows Install Even More with Game XP
Now that you've created your very own trimmed-down Windows installation, you're enjoying the performance boost and a smaller memory and hard drive footprint. But you can take things even further by installing and running another freeware application called Game XP. Designed to optimise your system settings and speed up your computer to maximize your gaming experience, Game XP can also be used to throttle unnecessary processing and boost the overall performance of your computer. Your mileage may vary when you try out Game XP on your system, but give it a try and watch your performance with and without to see if it changes how your lightweight system runs. Game XP runs from an executable file, so there's nothing to install. Just run it whenever you want to try out its speed-boosting capabilities. I haven't had any problems with this program, but I have read a few bad experiences, so proceed with caution.
Put Your Current Windows Install on a Diet with XPlite
Finally, if you've already gone through all the work of installing and setting up Windows just how you like it, you probably don't want to start with a fresh install with the likes of nLite. That doesn't mean that you can't still cut some of the bloat out of Windows. A program called XPlite rips selected components out of XP with the same goal as nLite—it just does it post-installation rather than pre-installation. XPlite comes in a demo version that provides limited removal features and a shareware version that can cut out even more fat.I'm new to nLite, but using the nLite wizard is a simple process. That said, if you've got experience with nLite—or other similar tools for optimizing and slimming down your Windows performance—let's hear about your experience in the comments. If you're a real pro and you'd like to share your Session.ini file with others, feel free to send them our way to host for others to try out.
UPDATE: I'll include reader-submissted nLite Last Session.ini files below as I receive them:
Adam Pash is a senior editor for Lifehacker who likes his virtual machines light and snappy. His special feature Hack Attack appears every Wednesday on Lifehacker AU.
Tags: feature | hack attack | how to | mac os x | optimisation | top | virtualisation | windows

Comments (AU Comments · US Comments)
There are currently no AU comments for this post.
KillDeer
Posted 4:05 AM 2/4/08
I wish taggs were displayed on the front page before you click on an article.
KillDeer
joelena
Posted 3:51 AM 2/4/08
@SilberDrachi: Adam mentioned (and linked to) vLite, which is nLite for Vista:
[www.vlite.net]
joelena
robroy911
Posted 3:48 AM 2/4/08
I am running a hacked version of Windows XP called MicroXP on one of my older machines. I have several copies of XP rpo I am not using so I don't feel as if I am stealing. It's a limited OS, but does what I need. Browse the Web, play games. It's very quick even on a 5 year old machine.
robroy911
SilberDrachi
Posted 3:42 AM 2/4/08
kinda sad none of this stuff is for Vista yet... it is way too bloated and even with my 4gigs of ram it can run slow (mostly due to the dwm.exe but i have a batch file to shut that off)
SilberDrachi
Ashley927
Posted 3:39 AM 2/4/08
some of this stuff is a bit hard to do if you are not a techonology expert...
Ashley927
radink360
Posted 3:36 AM 2/4/08
Awesome article. Been looking for something like this for a long time.
radink360
Yamanb
Posted 3:27 AM 2/4/08
Not sure if you guys have been following the recent hype around people installing Windows Server 2008 on their laptops, but I finally got around to doing this over the weekend and will not ever go back to Vista. Essentially, Server 2008 is what Vista should have been. It basically comes stripped down and you have to configure/add indiv. features such as Wireless Networking, Desktop Experience (Vista/Themes). I realize at the price of a server OS, this isn't for everyone but so far my experience has been great.
Yamanb
chris.peplin
Posted 4:44 AM 2/4/08
nLite is great - just be careful with some windows services. I removed the Volume Shadow Copy Service (vss) and one other backup service that I was sure I would never need, because I didn't use it directly. For the longest time this was okay, but after having a lot of trouble with Mozy (online backup) that their tech support was unable to solve, I pinpointed these missing services as the problem. It was pretty painful, because the Mozy install would say "these services will be turned on," but never report back that turning them on failed becuase they don't exist.
Anyway, nLite is still great, just consider being conservative and spending a few more KB if you're not 100% positive you won't need it.
chris.peplin
binaryspiral
Posted 4:41 AM 2/4/08
@Ashley927: Sometimes you just have to try. The instructions are complicated - but well written.
binaryspiral
Adam Pash
Posted 4:41 AM 2/4/08
@tap52384: You can send your file to adam at lifehacker.com and I'll upload it and share it at the end of the post.
Thanks for sharing!
Adam Pash
Jon
Posted 4:32 AM 2/4/08
I love nLite, I haven't done a default Windows install in years.
I was running WinXP Pro on a 10 year old laptop, P2 266 MHz with 192MB RAM, and it ran faster than Win98, Win2k, anything.
And with only a 4 GB hard drive, the 500MB total install was a big boon over the hefty 2GB default install. At boot, Windows only needed about 60MB RAM, 90MB with antivirus.
Jon
Urza
Posted 4:31 AM 2/4/08
@Ashley927: How do you figure?
If you know how to use a mouse, and how to burn a CD, its fairly straightforward from there.
Urza
suner
Posted 4:30 AM 2/4/08
windows to bare essentials tutorial:
[izobrazba.naspletu.com]
useful for quick speeding up pc before entering a game or something
suner
tap52384
Posted 4:26 AM 2/4/08
How did you want us to post our Last Session.ini files?
I have been using nLite since 2004, right before when Service Pack 2 was released for Windows XP, and this software has grown substantially.
The last time I used nLite was with a beta of Windows XP SP3 (3311) and with several addons which automatically install software, such as CCleaner, VirtualBox 1.5.6, Adobe Reader 8.1.2, and more.
tap52384
Norcross
Posted 5:14 AM 2/4/08
adding the bootable ISO feature to the end result is fantastic. I've used RyanVM's slipstreaming methods, but could never get the bootable disc working properly. This will make life much easier, esp. adding machine-specific drivers to an install.
Norcross
rainfever
Posted 5:10 AM 2/4/08
i like the idea of this, but i'm always afraid i'll strip too much and break something... Maybe this guide will help me avoid that scenario.
rainfever
yagameister
Posted 5:06 AM 2/4/08
I have been interested in something like this but haven't really dug for it. Excellent article, thanks. Glad to hear it works for others.
yagameister
dweakley
Posted 4:59 AM 2/4/08
How well does nLite work with a laptop or an OEM XP disc?
I don't have an "standard" XP disc any longer to test this out for myself.
dweakley
darkpaladin79
Posted 5:53 AM 2/4/08
I've not heard a single good thing about gamexp. . .
[www.softpedia.com]
darkpaladin79
Erik
Posted 5:30 AM 2/4/08
I have an Asus EEE PC which only has a 2gb drive and limited system specs. I used nLite to slim down Windows. Worked like a charm. If you take a little time to slipstream the hotfixes, patches, plugins, and drivers (etc) it makes reformatting your machine a lot easier. I now have a custom Windows install disc for all my Windows Machines.
For my eee I followed the directions here. Even though it's Asus eee specific, the guide can be used for anyone who wants a light Windows install that boots fast and takes up minimal space.
Erik
xrobevansx
Posted 5:29 AM 2/4/08
Windows Fundamentals for Leagcy PCs is also a slim XP version (not actually generally available to the public, but you can find it...wink wink)
[en.wikipedia.org]
xrobevansx
davidebrady
Posted 6:42 AM 2/4/08
Dont touch Game XP - my pc is still down at present - wasted an hour so far.
davidebrady
geekender
Posted 6:36 AM 2/4/08
I like the idea of trimming down your OS, but folks come on, we are already past the first Service Pack of Vista. WinXP is on the way out, like it or not. Personally, I have only had minor issues with Vista, however I have turned off UAC which is pretty annoying and unnecessary if you are running as a user anyway. There are many advancements that were made with Vista and if you look at the problems/bugs that were in the OS at the release versus those that were in XP, it was actually not that bad.
geekender
Aztek
Posted 6:16 AM 2/4/08
Hm streamlining Windows. Kinda like streamlining a kidney stone...
No seriously though, nice article!
Aztek
l337_7r4d3r
Posted 6:12 AM 2/4/08
@darkpaladin79: That link is just 1 dudes comments... Could be a M$ shill using influence to scare people off altered Windows.
I'm in love with nLite, I got a XP Pro down to 50mb install, works like a charm on Qemu. Quick virtualization off a flash drive on any PC, even without Admin. Suck it, IT ;)
I think we can all agree standard XP is pretty much a pos; tons of junk you'll never need eating up resources. Also, I think we're all some kind of terrorists for altering MS "intellectual" property.
l337_7r4d3r
jbinc1
Posted 6:00 AM 2/4/08
I use nlite whenever I have to load XP. Besides customization, it's great to slipstream updates and drivers. Here is a good site to get updates and add-ons. [xable.net]
I haven't tried vlite yet, but that's next.
jbinc1
downstairs
Posted 7:10 AM 2/4/08
Is there anywhere I can get a Last Session INI or some other guide to merely making the fastest least-bloat XP? But still including as many features as possible.
I guess, to clarify: this program allows you to remove a bunch of services that would be disabled by default anyway. So its not like it would actually hurt to have them.
Also, things like extra themes, fonts... I may never use them, but the only problem is they take up disk space- which doesn't matter to me.
downstairs
downstairs
Posted 7:04 AM 2/4/08
@geekender: Not to get into a Vista vs. XP battle, but really what advancements were made? I've never heard of a single advancement that meant anything.
I mean... ok, sleeker interface? But I use Windows Classic anyway.
downstairs
tootingbec
Posted 6:55 AM 2/4/08
@chris.peplin: Interesting tale about VSS ("Volume Shadow Copy Service"). Because the original poster was motivated by a desire to run a stripped-down XP in a VMware virtual machine, I should mention that another thing that wants to use VSS is VMware's Converter tool.
tootingbec
darshil
Posted 6:43 AM 2/4/08
nice article, but not too sure about game xp :S
ps: can anyone point out the wallpaper in that picture next to the heading whats the point?
thanls
darshil
rasti
Posted 7:42 AM 2/4/08
Did somebody tried Windows Fundamentals for Legacy PCs ("WinFLP")?
[en.wikipedia.org]
rasti
Mark
Posted 7:40 AM 2/4/08
When you get the system trimmed down, try using a flash drive, such as U3, to run non-essential applications. Every time I install an app, it always deems itself important enough to run on boot, further slowing the system down. You can change which applications launch on boot but keeping them on the flash drive has worked better for me. This has kept boot time down to a minimum.
Mark
Mark
Bobarkinator
Posted 7:24 AM 2/4/08
I've used Tiny XP which is what this is already trimmed down. I love it.
Bobarkinator
wild_bill
Posted 8:25 AM 2/4/08
I know this is kind of a topic of last week, but does anyone know if they can use a dell reinstall cd for this type of thing?
wild_bill
Ziyaad
Posted 8:47 AM 2/4/08
Awesome article, can you please make one with vLite to trim Vista? Thanks!
Ziyaad
Gonzie
Posted 9:37 AM 2/4/08
@rasti:
tried it, it's not quite xp tho there isn't the ability to set custom application accessibility. so literally firefox will keep asking to set itself as the default. it also won't have sp3 for a long while along with other updates. other that it's quite slick
Gonzie
Urza
Posted 10:50 AM 2/4/08
@geekender: I have to disagree. It'll be on the way out when major software developers start making the move to develop for Vista exclusively; which I really don't see happening.
Urza
lordeirias
Posted 10:45 AM 2/4/08
@Ziyaad: There really is not much more to add.... if you read this article Adam really does not say much on WHAT to delete, he just mentions some tools to do it. There are a few examples of items he could live without but in general it describes the tool.
As for a description of vLite: its virtually identical to nLite but with a shinier interface. At least in my experience. The stages are the same even, its just Vista did some things different so nLite's assumptions on where some stuff was became wrong for the newest Windows.
lordeirias
drjayphd
Posted 11:13 AM 2/4/08
Anyone know how a whittled-down installation will impact your licenses? I mean, I'd still have to activate it with Microsoft, and it would count as one of the valid installations, right?
drjayphd
Rhywun
Posted 11:52 AM 2/4/08
Does anyone have a *good* source with tips for simply speeding up an existing Vista installation? I've tried some things (such as turning off Aero) but they didn't make any difference that I could see.
Rhywun
pdok
Posted 11:39 AM 2/4/08
@drjayphd: You (usually) use your license keys to create the nLite install, or you enter it during the actual install process, so activation proceeds normally. It will count the same as a normal install would.
I think the comment above about being a little overwhelmed by the options here is a good one, but you don't have to fear the process of creating a lite install disk, since you can just start over if you inadvertently remove something really important. Plus, your work is saved in the session files.
My only major irritation is in the painful process of getting all the updates to integrate. Thanks to Windows Update Downloader, it's good to go.
pdok
brian25
Posted 12:55 PM 2/4/08
@geekender: Most distributors will be able to supply OEM versions of XP until 2016.
brian25
zackrobbin
Posted 12:45 PM 2/4/08
gak. xplite doesn't work with windows xp sp3, and they seem to have no idea, either
zackrobbin
ShabazOSU
Posted 1:55 PM 2/4/08
A year ago when I made an XP CD w/nLite & it's ISO components, it messed with my iTunes & did not allow me to burn cds from there until I un-installed an ISO program I downloaded (which I needed & was recommended by nLite).
ShabazOSU
PaladinMJ
Posted 1:52 PM 2/4/08
@SilberDrachi: nlite has a second vista version called... get this... vLite. works the same but for vista.
PaladinMJ
ludwigk
Posted 3:10 PM 2/4/08
Adam, if the point is to make Windows faster, why are you removing the "Prefetch Functionality"? This is supposed to speed up boot time and assist with application caching. Shouldn't think make your system run faster?
I'm a mac technician, so this is only relevant for me in terms of improving my bootcamping, and I'm not a windows tweaker by any means.
ludwigk
l337_7r4d3r
Posted 12:24 AM 3/4/08
@Urza: Agreed... If MS convinces developers to try and muscle people into Vista, that's the day I go 100% Linux.
Vista is a hilarious failure. I use XP because I need to for work, and it works fairly well thanks to a lot of smart tweakers and many years for MS to fix it. But having experienced Vista, I can say that POS will never make it on anything other than a VM for me... Unless it gets fixed, which seems distant and unlikely.
l337_7r4d3r
ericsprojects
Posted 1:10 AM 3/4/08
This looks like a great utility. I'll check it out for the next time I want to reinstall.
I have tried XPLite, and it does a fabulous job, although, most users benefit the most from simply uninstalling software they don't need, removing spyware, viruses and general system cleanup.
I put together an article, that anyone can follow, on Optimizing XP on a 850Mhz machine with an 8gig HD. It works great and I have room for a 1.5gig TrueCrypt volume on the hard drive and room to spare.
The article uses totally free software, no regedits, no command line.
[www.ericsprojects.com]
A seriously in-depth article I found on tweaking XP, that has an explanations of some of XPs services is:
[www.tweakhound.com]
ericsprojects
Sahel Khan
Posted 2:27 AM 3/4/08
@TimHare: there is MinWin
->[www.istartedsomething.com]
->[en.wikipedia.org]
Sahel Khan
Sahel Khan
Posted 2:19 AM 3/4/08
As usual, LH saves the day... Just what I was looking for, when I was looking for it.
Sahel Khan
TimHare
Posted 2:11 AM 3/4/08
This just points out some things which ought to get more press:
An operating system should be the components necessary to make the hardware operate. On Windows that would be the kernel and any necessary drivers. A command-line interface should be included for minimal configuration, etc.
The shell or user interface ought to be choosable, although on Windows you're often stuck with the one they ship depending on the level of the OS.
Everything else (think: Windows Media Player, the calculator, screensavers, whatever) is an application, i.e. a program that you use to accomplish something but which needs the OS, and often the UI infrastructure, to do the job. Things like Windows Update, and all of those other things which start up when your system does, also usually fall in this category.
A lot of Windows "bloat" is in the application category. This is also true for most other desktop "operating systems" that ship a lot of "cool tools".
The other main source would fall into the driver and "component" category: things which allow you configuration choices and which make it easy for you to set up or re-configure your machine - for example, it's really nice that Windows has all of those printer drivers included, it makes it simple to add a printer, but it does add to the disk footprint.
I'm not sure how it would affect cost, but I'd like to see a minimal OS ship, where I'd have to actively choose all of the other applications instead of getting them by default.
TimHare
freddiefenster
Posted 2:11 AM 3/4/08
Adam, it's actually VMware not VMWare...
freddiefenster
jaxun
Posted 3:20 AM 3/4/08
I should mention that the actual OS only takes up 800MB with that install.
jaxun
jaxun
Posted 3:16 AM 3/4/08
@xrobevansx: WinFLP + Portable Virtual PC (yes, you read that right!) = Speedy Go Anywhere XP with a 2 GB footprint. Awesomeness!
jaxun
KaiserVonShizer
Posted 7:11 PM 2/4/08
excellent. The works starts tomorrow, when my new set up arrives.
KaiserVonShizer
balow
Posted 1:22 PM 2/4/08
Is there is a comparison of memory usage before and after trim? What about hard disk space taken?
Btw, thanks for sharing!
balow
the4starish
Posted 9:58 AM 2/4/08
@darshil: Its a part of the Royale Theme pack that was created for Media Center Edition. I believe its still called "Bliss" even though it doesn't look like the original that comes with standard XP.
the4starish
johnsmith1234
Posted 9:33 AM 2/4/08
nlite is great. When I downgraded my laptop I used it to slipstream SP2 in, made some customizations, include the SATA drivers, and set it for unattended installation. Unlike a normal XP install where you sporadically have to answer prompts, I could just put the disc in, start installation, walk away and in half an hour it was sitting at the desktop ready for use. I don't have it slipstream in acrobat reader 8 since Acrobat's a POS and Foxit is much leaner. Once I installed drivers and basic apps I made a disk image so any future reinstalls will be a breeze.
One issue is SFC throws fits about missing files. Also if you don't install something that you later need or want it's a bit of a PITA getting it back. Too bad these Windows components couldn't be more easily added and removed using add/remove programs.
If it's not a virtual machine or extremely minimal hardware(EeePC), hard drive space isn't the absolute crush point for me (even on older PCs). I just run a moreso typical installation, then make customized tweaks: delete update uninstall file s($NTUninstall), and manually disable unnecessary services but I can re-enable them if needed.
I've tried WINFLP. It's original design intent is supposed to be moreo "terminal" use for buisnesses, not a general purpose OS. Not all applications will install without a hitch however it's mostly like Microsoft doing all the legwork of nLite. It's good for a lean install if you just need a couple apps inside a virtual machine. However it's only available under volume licensing so it's difficult to legally obtain.
@geekender: Yes XP is on the way out however that doesn't mean people have to throw away their perfectly good XP licenses if it meets their needs. In some cases XP is a better choice. Vista will not install on a PII with 128MB RAM, XP will and will provide a perfectly serviceable basic workstation. Heck Vista won't run on a PIII with 256MB RAM, XP runs just fine. An XP install will be smaller if one needs just enough Windows to run in a Virtual machine or dual boot to run Windows only apps.
johnsmith1234
Silverhair
Posted 9:03 AM 2/4/08
With a little amount of studying, you can get similar, or results using Bold_Fortune's 'Guide to Slimming Down Windows XP' for free, although donations are gratefully accepted :-)
There's also a forum, so you can get near-instant help if you get stuck with anything, as well as some excellent discussions about the 'inner workings' of Win XP.
[www.bold-fortune.com]
Silverhair
nakedm0s3s
Posted 10:43 AM 3/4/08
I actually showed this to my IT director, now I reign supreme in the IT dept! Go me! and lifehacker!
P.S. My first post on this site!
nakedm0s3s
Brian Bowes
Posted 7:42 AM 4/4/08
Hi. Loved the idea of this. I have a 'vanilla' profile on my computer and I typically use enditall before I game so I was excited to see this solution.
I did notice a performance gain in just using my computer for everyday tasks. However now I notice that I can no longer preview, rotate or see photos in thumbnail. I also get an error upon booting that I am missing a dll and to put my XP SP2 CD in.
When I first ran the program Threatfire went off (first time ever and I have used it for 6 months). Since it was a Lifehacker recommend program, I ignored Threatfire and ran it anyway.
I googled "gamexp problems" and didnt find an overwhelming amount of problems with it, but I should have listened to Threatfire.
Can anyone point me to gamexp problems and possible solutions?
Guess it might be a good excuse to use Fred Langa's: XP's No-Reformat, Nondestructive Total-Rebuild Option [tinyurl.com]
Thanks, Brian
Brian Bowes
tubeyes
Posted 8:21 PM 5/4/08
Yeah!!! So, this does work for OEM discs right?
tubeyes
Synaesthesia242
Posted 6:32 AM 7/4/08
The smallest XP install I've seen is TinyXP. It takes up only like 135mb on a cd!
Synaesthesia242
l337_7r4d3r
Posted 11:55 PM 7/4/08
@jaxun: I tried Virtual PC 2007 Portable but was getting an error... So I went QemuManager. No regrets, performance acceleration in new version really puts it on par with VirtualPC.
But with Qemu has USB support unlike VirtualPC, so I think I'll stick with it ;)
@Synaesthesia242: There's a "MicroXP" put out by the same geniuses that made TinyXP. I think it's about half of TinyXP.
Works amazing for VMs.
l337_7r4d3r