Sign on Options
Theme: [Light Selected] To Dark»

Microsoft's new Windows Vista operating system looks great and offers several improvements over Windows XP, but it's also a memory hog. Using Vista with 512MB of memory is like wading through quicksand. Moving up to 1GB of memory feels slightly better, but the new operating system only smoothes out when you give it two or four gigabytes of memory.

Fortunately, Windows Vista offers a ReadyBoost memory expansion feature for those of us who either don't know how to upgrade memory, or simply don't have the money or system capacity for extra memory. ReadyBoost allows users to plug in a spare USB flash drive in lieu of cracking open the computer case and slapping more RAM onto the motherboard. Installation couldn't get any easier than that--and did we mention it's cheap? A 2GB flash drive won't set you back more than $20, but an extra gigabyte of RAM can easily cost $70 or more.

ReadyBoost will take advantage of flash drives as small as 256MB and as large as 4GB. For the time being, you won't gain any benefit from stuffing all your USB slots full of flash memory, as Vista allows for only one ReadyBoost drive.

Installing a ReadyBoost drive is literally as easy as plugging it in. Once you've inserted the flash drive, Vista will test to see if it can use your flash drive for ReadyBoost purposes. Chances are older drives won't pass the test. Numerous flash drive manufacturers have released labeled and pretested drives. If the drive passes the internal tests, Vista will bring up a prompt that asks if you want to use the drive for ReadyBoost. At that time, you can also set how much of the drive you want to dedicate to ReadyBoost.

We tested ReadyBoost partition sizes of 256MB, 512MB, 1GB, and 4GB on our 4GB Super Talent flash drive, which effectively simulated different sized flash drives in our tests. We also checked to see how ReadyBoost affects performance with different quantities of RAM.

Company of Heroes

(Longer bars indicate better performance)

Ultra Quality, 1600x1200

512MB RAM
16
512MB RAM, 256MB ReadyBoost
75
512MB RAM, 1GB ReadyBoost
86
512MB RAM, 4GB ReadyBoost
85
1GB RAM
89
1GB RAM, 256MB ReadyBoost
104
1GB RAM, 1GB ReadyBoost
105
1GB RAM, 4GB ReadyBoost
107
2GB RAM
110
2GB RAM, 256MB ReadyBoost
110
2GB RAM, 1GB ReadyBoost
110
2GB RAM, 4GB ReadyBoost
110
4GB RAM
110
4GB RAM, 256MB ReadyBoost
110
4GB RAM, 1GB ReadyBoost
110
4GB RAM, 4GB ReadyBoost
110

Half-Life 2 Lost Coast

(Longer bars indicate better performance)

High Quality 2048x1535, 4xAA

512MB RAM
54
512MB RAM, 256MB ReadyBoost
64
512MB RAM, 1GB ReadyBoost
66
512MB RAM, 4GB ReadyBoost
66
1GB RAM
68
1GB RAM, 256MB ReadyBoost
68
1GB RAM, 1GB ReadyBoost
68
1GB RAM, 4GB ReadyBoost
68
2GB RAM
68
2GB RAM, 256MB ReadyBoost
68
2GB RAM, 1GB ReadyBoost
68
2GB RAM, 4GB ReadyBoost
68
4GB RAM
68
4GB RAM, 256MB ReadyBoost
68
4GB RAM, 1GB ReadyBoost
68
4GB RAM, 4GB ReadyBoost
68

System Setup: Intel Core 2 X6800, Intel 975XBX2, Corsair XMS2 Pro Series Memory (512MBx1, 512MBx2, 1GBx2, 1GBx4), 160GB Seagate 7200.7 SATA Hard Disk Drive, Windows Vista. Graphics Cards: GeForce 8800 GTX 768MB, Forceware 100.65. Super Talent 4GB USB 2.0 Flash Drive.

How well does Windows Vista run on your system? Do you think you’re going to upgrade your system memory or possibly get a ReadyBoost drive for better performance?

Under the Hood: Windows Vista ReadyBoost Report

If you find your Windows Vista machine a little sluggish, it might need a little jolt of power from ReadyBoost.

Tags