- WINDOWS TWEAK EBOOK REVIEW UPDATE
- WINDOWS TWEAK EBOOK REVIEW REGISTRATION
- WINDOWS TWEAK EBOOK REVIEW SOFTWARE
- WINDOWS TWEAK EBOOK REVIEW PC
- WINDOWS TWEAK EBOOK REVIEW LICENSE
It comes with a quick defrag tool as well. Under the other tweaks side of things, you get to select what type of Superfetching you want to use, whether you want to disable the Windows Indexing service or enable the Windows 8 Autostart delay. Under the windows XP/Vista/7 panel, you get an array of tweaks that range from Prefetcher type selection to enable boot tracing selection. This means that they will all work for Windows 8 but don’t quote me on that, I got this information from their website. You’ll have to note that these aren’t specific to the operating system you’re currently running, they are tweaking methods developed and built from older operating systems. You get Windows XP/Vista/7 tweaks and other tweaks. Under standard tweaks, you get operating system specific tweaks.
You get the SSD Tweaker home tab, the standard tweaks tab, the advanced tweaks tab, the options tab and the log tab. Only four work if you’re a cheapskate who’s using the free version like me. The application’s functionality is sectioned out into five different tabs.
WINDOWS TWEAK EBOOK REVIEW REGISTRATION
It blatantly advertises the Professional version of the application and it even has the audacity to place a text field and button for registration on this screen. What I absolutely hate about this application rears it’s ugly head in the SSD Optimization wizard screen as well.
WINDOWS TWEAK EBOOK REVIEW LICENSE
If you have a registered license key, advanced system application and trim optimization are made available to you.
WINDOWS TWEAK EBOOK REVIEW SOFTWARE
It checks for software updates, creates a system restore point, gathers configuration data and applies optimized settings. Auto Tweak performs 4 base operations (6 if you have the professional version) from an SSD optimization wizard screen. Under this tab, you’ll find a giant application logo, along with a button labelled ‘Start Auto Tweak’.
On startup, the application opens up to the SSD Tweaker tab. However, lets look at the features that come standard with its free version. What you see is what you get, unless you’re looking at the Advanced Tweaks tab without a license, then you’re just window shopping. No journey is in vain and what I gathered from this particular one is that this application does not come with any real mutable settings or options. I searched high and low for a place or an option to disable this feature and I came back with nothing. On application start up, it will check for updates, whether you like it or not. It’s one of the few painless things about this application. From this, you can expect the setup to be fast and painless – and it is. The installation file weighs in at a scale of 599 KB.
WINDOWS TWEAK EBOOK REVIEW UPDATE
It performs update checks on each start up.Operations are sectioned out and separated by tabs, this creates cohesion in the user interface.SSD Tweaker offers a set of tools that are built to optimize your Solid State Disk and ensure that it runs smoothly.
WINDOWS TWEAK EBOOK REVIEW PC
My PC blinks awake at boot up and I don’t feel as if any tuning or tweaking is necessary but for us who do, SSD Tweaker should be able to cater to your obsessive compulsive needs. Since I’m not of the Donald Trump variety, I own a measly 120 GB SSD from Samsung and I’m yet to suffer any failures or inconsistencies in read and write operations(but there was this one time….Ahhh forget about it). If you’re a millionaire and what the great poet and businessman, Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs describes as a ‘baller and shot caller’, you can splurge on the LSI 4 TB SSD for $29,000. Their 1 TB offering costs about $530 which is not bad, considering that five years ago, 80 GB SSDs were going for $595. As Samsung corners the market with it’s new range of extremely large (in disk space) 840 EVO SSDs for consumers, this eliminates the ‘it doesn’t have enough disk space’ argument. People aren’t willing to sacrifice disk size, money and certainty for speed and silence.
There was a time when SSDs were considered to be too unreliable and expensive to be a viable option for persistence data storage by the general population.