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ReadyBoost was exciting when Windows Vista came out, especially for PC owners with lower-tier hardware. However, in the world of blazing-fast SSDs and system memory, it's antiquated.
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ReadyBoost, an upcoming Vista technology, can take advantage of a USB drive to … ...
My colleague George Ou notes that many Windows Vista upgraders are in for a rude shock when they find that their flash RAM devices don't work well with the new ReadyBoost feature in Windows Vista ...
On the first run, without ReadyBoost, the laptop scored 2,240 in PCMark 2005, and on the second run with a 2GB USB key and ReadyBoost enabled, it achieved 2,414 ...
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 ...
What is ReadyBoost? ReadyBoost is Windows Vista feature that allows the user to plug a USB flash memory device into a USB 2.0 port on the PC and use it as a cache or virtual memory.
Windows only: Speed up your computer with a spare USB thumb drive with eBoostr, an XP-only application that brings the benefits of Windows Vista's Re ...
One of the many benefits touted in Windows Vista is ReadyBoost, a new feature that allows the OS to use flash drives as pseudo-RAM in order to increase performance. However, in order for this to ...
Includes Ridata Yego, Twister, Slider, Junior and Shark USB Drives Diamond Bar, Calif. — July 23, 2007–Advanced Media, Inc., a manufacturer and marketer of the popular Ridata brand of recordable CD ...