Disabling Windows indexing can be beneficial for an HDD.
Disabling Windows indexing can be beneficial for an HDD.
I'm working on an i5 processor from the 6th generation laptop with just a 1TB HDD. Before discussing, I understand my system isn’t great—planning to upgrade soon. Right now I can’t afford an SSD because they’re too pricey in India. Quick note: should I wait for Zen 3 mobile CPUs and NVIDIA 3000 series chips for laptops? If yes, when would that be? Also, someone mentioned disabling Windows search indexing might help disk performance. My questions are: 1) Does it really make a difference in everyday use? 2) How does indexing change on HDD vs SSD? 3) What impact would this have? 4) Is there a way to pause the indexing without using Windows search? Thanks for reading, and sorry if this repeats.
It relies on your definition of help.
2. The variation isn’t significant.
3. Your searches would need a million years to complete since there’s no index for file locations.
4. I’m confused about this question—what does removing search and replace with everything mean?
5. Huh?
Indexing usually occurs when the system is not in use, which means you won’t notice a difference on a daily basis. The Search Everything feature continues to function identically, scanning all your files before you fully utilize its capabilities. By default, Windows indexes only a small range of directories. You have the option to adjust this setting.
Tell Windows to stop acting like it's idle, even when I'm using high CPU and GPU usage. It keeps launching diagnostics randomly and crashes because my PC is trying too hard to run the game. The behavior is definitely different from what it should do. I don’t care about searching much—just trust Windows to mess things up now and then.
Do you have $25? Install a small SSD, use it as a cache for your HDD, run a fresh Windows installation there, and move all other files to the HDD. Your system shouldn’t crash, even if you’re using just an HDD.
i mentioned wanting a new system, but the SKU availability in my area is unclear due to recent updates. since i won’t use this laptop afterward, the small ssd seems unnecessary and i’m hesitant to pay for it unless i need it soon. moving windows to it would be a hassle, and i prefer not to waste money until my job resumes—especially with the ongoing pandemic.
You can rely on that statement! But I believe your concerns (slowness?) stem from search indexing, not your processor. Windows generally tends to slow down after each update, particularly on laptops. The next step should be identifying the specific Windows version and update installed on your device.
I'm facing the same issue, my laptop is running much slower now and keeps getting worse without any clear reason. The update also messed up the "harman audio software" on it. You might want to consider getting a new laptop or reinstalling Windows, which can be quite time-consuming due to all the special drivers and settings. It seems the update process itself is causing more problems than it solves.