Ready Boost
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This General Discussion board is meant for topics that are still relevant to Pale Moon, web browsers, browser tech, UXP applications, and related, but don't have a more fitting board available.
Please stick to the relevance of this forum here, which focuses on everything around the Pale Moon project and its user community. "Random" subjects don't belong here, and should be posted in the Off-Topic board.
This General Discussion board is meant for topics that are still relevant to Pale Moon, web browsers, browser tech, UXP applications, and related, but don't have a more fitting board available.
Please stick to the relevance of this forum here, which focuses on everything around the Pale Moon project and its user community. "Random" subjects don't belong here, and should be posted in the Off-Topic board.
Ready Boost
Pale Moon seems to use more RAM. I have 4 GB, and could buy more, but my laptop needs DDR2 which is pricey.
Usually I close the browser, then reopen it.
Friends have suggested Ready Boost, of which I have been skeptical.
Does anyone have an opinion about Ready Boost? Is it useful? Or is it a pipedream?
Thank you.
Usually I close the browser, then reopen it.
Friends have suggested Ready Boost, of which I have been skeptical.
Does anyone have an opinion about Ready Boost? Is it useful? Or is it a pipedream?
Thank you.
- Pentium4User
- Board Warrior
- Posts: 1137
- Joined: 2019-04-24, 09:38
Re: Ready Boost
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ReadyBoostReadyBoost enables NAND memory mass storage CompactFlash, SD card, and USB flash drive devices to be used as a cache between the hard drive and random access memory in an effort to increase computing performance.
This might help reduce RAM usage by the OS itself but I think most of the RAM usage by the browser is web content that isn't on your drive.
The profile picture shows my Maico EC30 E ceiling fan.
Re: Ready Boost
I also have just 4GB. Haven't used ReadyBoost. Others I've tried don't really help. All I do now is monitor and start closing things at ~80% to avoid crashes.
Win10home(1709), PM33.0.0-portable as of Feb 1, '24
- back2themoon
- Moon Magic practitioner
- Posts: 2410
- Joined: 2012-08-19, 20:32
Re: Ready Boost
Using many open tabs? Suspender might help.
Safe Mode / clean profile info: Help/Restart in Safe Mode
Information to include when asking for support - How to apply user agent overrides
How to auto-fill passwords
Windows 10 Pro x64
Information to include when asking for support - How to apply user agent overrides
How to auto-fill passwords
Windows 10 Pro x64
Re: Ready Boost
SSD with system and pagefile on it will improve overall QOL of being on laptop, not just in Pale Moon.
ReadyBoost won't do anything good, considering speed of USB 2.0 and usb storage devices.
ReadyBoost won't do anything good, considering speed of USB 2.0 and usb storage devices.
Re: Ready Boost
Thank you for the comments. I had been pondering SSD, which is cheaper than RAM in my situation.
Currently, I am running 1 tab. Even typing this, Pale Moon hangs ("not responding") intermittently.
My add-ons are uBlock Origin and Clear Cache. [Disconnect (3.15), Fireshot and Lucifox have disabled for a few weeks.]
I ended up removing legacy NoScript awhile ago, an add-on I relied on, but it had become a bad relationship,
Outside of the browser, I mostly use a word processor for writing.
Most of my memory usage is from Pale Moon and AVG.
The browser freezing, not responding, has stymied me.
I was hoping (oh, the fool and his hopes) that Ready Boost might be a workaround.
Glancing at CleanMem from time to time, the RB has not.
I usually run 2 tabs. 3 on occasion, though I avoid that.
Currently, I am running 1 tab. Even typing this, Pale Moon hangs ("not responding") intermittently.
My add-ons are uBlock Origin and Clear Cache. [Disconnect (3.15), Fireshot and Lucifox have disabled for a few weeks.]
I ended up removing legacy NoScript awhile ago, an add-on I relied on, but it had become a bad relationship,
Outside of the browser, I mostly use a word processor for writing.
Most of my memory usage is from Pale Moon and AVG.
The browser freezing, not responding, has stymied me.
I was hoping (oh, the fool and his hopes) that Ready Boost might be a workaround.
Glancing at CleanMem from time to time, the RB has not.
Re: Ready Boost
Have you tried making a fresh profile since removing NoScript?
"Sometimes, the best way to get what you want is to be a good person." -- Louis Rossmann
"Seek wisdom, not knowledge. Knowledge is of the past; wisdom is of the future." -- Native American proverb
"Linux makes everything difficult." -- Lyceus Anubite
"Seek wisdom, not knowledge. Knowledge is of the past; wisdom is of the future." -- Native American proverb
"Linux makes everything difficult." -- Lyceus Anubite
Re: Ready Boost
Mmm ... actually I never knew how to do that, so it never entered my mind.
I saw a link in "Gotta Go" (viewtopic.php?f=65&t=26532&p=212181&hil ... le#p212181) and followed instructions.
Thank you.
Also, I read Vannilla's comments elsewhere (viewtopic.php?f=3&t=26469&p=212415#p212404) about a possible problem caused by Google or Gmail.
While I avoid Google on principle, damned if the first place I log into every morning is Blogger to post film reviews.
Then I go about my business.
I think I will use a different browser for that from now on. Maybe Midori, which I seldom use.
Thanks again, all.
Re: Ready Boost
Open about:profiles in a new tab (as in type that in the address bar), and you'll be taken to an easy GUI to create and manage profiles. Then install Profile Switcher which can be configured to let you choose which profile to use at startup.
And finally another important tip. Create one profile and leave it at its defaults without changing anything. The next time you have a problem with a broken website, use this for testing so that you can easily rule out any problems caused by extensions or settings in your main profile before you report it here.
"One hosts to look them up, one DNS to find them and in the darkness BIND them."
Linux Mint 21 Xfce x64 on HP i5-5200 laptop, 12 GB RAM.
AutoPageColor|PermissionsPlus|PMPlayer|Pure URL|RecordRewind|TextFX
Linux Mint 21 Xfce x64 on HP i5-5200 laptop, 12 GB RAM.
AutoPageColor|PermissionsPlus|PMPlayer|Pure URL|RecordRewind|TextFX
Re: Ready Boost
You would be better off using -profilemanager or --profilemanager depending on Windows vs Linux to deal with your profiles rather than a limited immature in-content form.
HOWEVER, ReadyBoost is a shit gimmick technology. Basically a slow as fuck ram drive saved on nand chips over USB. Terrible. Just download more ram!
HOWEVER, ReadyBoost is a shit gimmick technology. Basically a slow as fuck ram drive saved on nand chips over USB. Terrible. Just download more ram!
Re: Ready Boost
To be honest, I have never thought about profile ... ever!
I'm laughing because I use VPNs from time to time, and have privacy extensions, and have various email accounts.
But profiles, for me, are akin to, "You know, you could set up an account on Jupiter."
I cannot install (it would be $140), but I can download?
How do I do this?
An admirer wants to know!
I'm laughing because I use VPNs from time to time, and have privacy extensions, and have various email accounts.
But profiles, for me, are akin to, "You know, you could set up an account on Jupiter."
Wait, wait, wait! Really?
I cannot install (it would be $140), but I can download?
How do I do this?
An admirer wants to know!
Re: Ready Boost
Yeah, normally no one needs to except when you want to backup. But heed what I said about keeping a separate fresh profile handy to quickly test broken websites before posting about them here.
"One hosts to look them up, one DNS to find them and in the darkness BIND them."
Linux Mint 21 Xfce x64 on HP i5-5200 laptop, 12 GB RAM.
AutoPageColor|PermissionsPlus|PMPlayer|Pure URL|RecordRewind|TextFX
Linux Mint 21 Xfce x64 on HP i5-5200 laptop, 12 GB RAM.
AutoPageColor|PermissionsPlus|PMPlayer|Pure URL|RecordRewind|TextFX
Re: Ready Boost
Well if it is FRESH you should delete the profile when you are done with it and create a new one when you need it. Else it will get stale and no one has bothered to write nsIToolkitProfileZiploc to seal in the freshness yet.
Re: Ready Boost
New Tobin Paradigm wrote: ↑2021-04-08, 04:04Well if it is FRESH you should delete the profile when you are done with it and create a new one when you need it. Else it will get stale and no one has bothered to write nsIToolkitProfileZiploc to seal in the freshness yet.
Someone might take this seriously!
"One hosts to look them up, one DNS to find them and in the darkness BIND them."
Linux Mint 21 Xfce x64 on HP i5-5200 laptop, 12 GB RAM.
AutoPageColor|PermissionsPlus|PMPlayer|Pure URL|RecordRewind|TextFX
Linux Mint 21 Xfce x64 on HP i5-5200 laptop, 12 GB RAM.
AutoPageColor|PermissionsPlus|PMPlayer|Pure URL|RecordRewind|TextFX
Re: Ready Boost
Thanks, gents.
My problems seem to have gone away.
I made a copy of the new profile, and clouded it.
Chances are, I will never think of it.
Generally, if a site refuses to work with PM, I try a different browser.
I'm just a user, and I suspect other users do likewise.
Per Mr. Tobin's advice, I removed the Ready Boost which seemed to do jack.
Thank you again for the comments.
My problems seem to have gone away.
I made a copy of the new profile, and clouded it.
Chances are, I will never think of it.
Generally, if a site refuses to work with PM, I try a different browser.
I'm just a user, and I suspect other users do likewise.
Per Mr. Tobin's advice, I removed the Ready Boost which seemed to do jack.
Thank you again for the comments.
Re: Ready Boost
Hopefully ram prices drop and you can get some. Seems almost all pc compoents are being jacked up for no reason.
Re: Ready Boost
Seems a bit drastic
"One hosts to look them up, one DNS to find them and in the darkness BIND them."
Linux Mint 21 Xfce x64 on HP i5-5200 laptop, 12 GB RAM.
AutoPageColor|PermissionsPlus|PMPlayer|Pure URL|RecordRewind|TextFX
Linux Mint 21 Xfce x64 on HP i5-5200 laptop, 12 GB RAM.
AutoPageColor|PermissionsPlus|PMPlayer|Pure URL|RecordRewind|TextFX
Re: Ready Boost
There are some things that might preload stuff into RAM, but this can be done so although the RAM is full, it can still be used if needed, like superfetch in Windows claims to do. So RAM appearing full may not be a problem, it's only your entire OS being loaded into there in case it's needed. Many data plans have a 10-15GB download limit per month, it would take some seriously heavy websites to use up 4GB. About 10 year old laptops and newer often have some internal slot for a mini ssd drive that can be used to speed system performance, but that mainly entails installing the OS or key parts of it on there. Also SSD's come in different speeds, eg Western Digital green, red and black. An ssd is still 1 or 2 orders of magnitude slower than RAM though.
Wait, it's all Ohio? Always has been...
- tcaudilllg
- Moongazer
- Posts: 11
- Joined: 2021-04-05, 18:05
Re: Ready Boost
I recommend disabling Ion in about:config. It's only used when a piece of Javascript is called hundreds of times (to speed it up), often fails to deliver and will increase your RAM usage 2x.
Never forget nor forgive the Addonocalypse.
Re: Ready Boost
So what you JUST said is disable IonMonkey because it is only useful on the whole of the modern (read: corporate) web.
Uh huh. Good luck with that.
Uh huh. Good luck with that.