F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Your Windows 10 starts quickly thanks to its optimized boot process!

Your Windows 10 starts quickly thanks to its optimized boot process!

Your Windows 10 starts quickly thanks to its optimized boot process!

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LuxRabbit
Junior Member
11
11-01-2016, 06:42 AM
#1
It requires six seconds to notice my desktop once the blue windows flag appears, and then roughly ten more seconds for everything to load.
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LuxRabbit
11-01-2016, 06:42 AM #1

It requires six seconds to notice my desktop once the blue windows flag appears, and then roughly ten more seconds for everything to load.

S
sda1
Junior Member
11
11-01-2016, 11:50 AM
#2
36 Seconds
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sda1
11-01-2016, 11:50 AM #2

36 Seconds

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_Shipow_
Member
72
11-01-2016, 07:00 PM
#3
Keep it simple. Track the duration from pressing the power button until the desktop is ready (use a pause timer if you need to type a password). This helps gauge graphics card startup time—especially for Nvidia/AMD GPUs—which reviewers usually ignore. Also note BIOS/UEFI loading, Windows boot speed, and how quickly your account launches with background apps.
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_Shipow_
11-01-2016, 07:00 PM #3

Keep it simple. Track the duration from pressing the power button until the desktop is ready (use a pause timer if you need to type a password). This helps gauge graphics card startup time—especially for Nvidia/AMD GPUs—which reviewers usually ignore. Also note BIOS/UEFI loading, Windows boot speed, and how quickly your account launches with background apps.

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Agman10
Senior Member
690
11-10-2016, 08:55 AM
#4
Just 12 seconds left on the power button. Keep using it like your old 386—press the button and let it brew a cup of coffee while it starts up.
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Agman10
11-10-2016, 08:55 AM #4

Just 12 seconds left on the power button. Keep using it like your old 386—press the button and let it brew a cup of coffee while it starts up.

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_DarkStone_
Member
227
11-18-2016, 01:47 AM
#5
It really doesn't matter. My computer starts up slower than any I built for friends and family. The reason is the mix of storage devices—four HDDs, two SSDs, a music card, an SATA controller, and USB controllers—which all contribute to a sluggish boot time. Besides, some programs that slow down the initial start-up can actually help speed things up later on. So if I had to pick between a quick boot or a fast-running computer with lots of useful hardware and software, I’d go with the latter.
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_DarkStone_
11-18-2016, 01:47 AM #5

It really doesn't matter. My computer starts up slower than any I built for friends and family. The reason is the mix of storage devices—four HDDs, two SSDs, a music card, an SATA controller, and USB controllers—which all contribute to a sluggish boot time. Besides, some programs that slow down the initial start-up can actually help speed things up later on. So if I had to pick between a quick boot or a fast-running computer with lots of useful hardware and software, I’d go with the latter.