Posted By: Yggdrasil | Feb 15th, 2008 @ 7:16 AM
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Comments: 7 | Views: 8188
Yggdrasil
Yggdrasil
Pour me a cab, 'cause I can't drink no more.
I've installed Windows Server 2008 RTM on my dev machine recently (damn Sharepoint!), and couldn't help but notice that I don't get the ReadyBoost prompt for USB disks like in Vista.
Also couldn't find anything in the control panel/server management, or by googling around.

Does anyone know if it's possible to enable it, and if so how? I'd rather not try to replicate registry settings from a Vista machine unless I know it'll do me good.
Maddus Mattus
Maddus Mattus
Do, or do not. There is no try. - Yoda
I think they didnt include it because a server is not ment to be rebooted.
stevo_
stevo_
Human after all

Not sure what readyboost has to do with rebooting.. but the idea of readyboost I think was to act like a weak cache..

In the server world, we're expecting high end machines that will have lots of storage, processing power and memory..

Given that readyboost is only really going to marginally add performance to those systems with serious bottlenecks in ram (or really slow harddrives), I don't think it has a place in the server market..

ZippyV
ZippyV
Fired Up
I think it's installed with the Desktop Experience package.
So is ReadyBoost not supported on Server 2008?

W T F ?
blowdart
blowdart
Peek-a-boo
Why would it be? ReadyBoost takes memory away from other processes. It's there to speed up an interactive UI experience; it doesn't really speed up services; and like it or not, Server is not aimed at UI scenarios
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