They say that lifeâs most difficult tribulations also result in the greatest insights and wisdom once youâre through it. Letâs just say that purchasing a brand new laptop with Vista installed on it was one of my greatest tribulations to date.
So Iâm taking this opportunity to share the wisdom that Iâve gained from that experience so that, possibly, I can save the next poor soul the trouble and heartache that I had to suffer through.
Am I being over-dramatic? Maybe. But what you have to understand is that at the very center of my livelihood is the Internet. I earn income, learn and unwind all on the Internet. When I lose that connection to the virtual world â" Iâm not a happy camper.
Rewind several months to the day when I purchased a new, shiny Sony Vaio laptop. I brought it home, excitedly opened up the box and turned it on, expecting the brand new laptop with a build-in wireless ethernet card to instantly sense my home network and connect almost completely automatically. Unfortunately, it sensed nothing. Many hours later, after an unmentionable amount of coffee consumed, I finally had my new Vista laptop on the Internet and screaming.
To save MUO readers out there who find themselves in this situation countless hours of aggravation, Iâd like to offer the most important lessons I learned about Vista during this ordeal. Earlier, Aseem offered applications you can install that will improve your PC performance. However, Iâd like to present the top five ways you can tweak Vista itself to get your Internet connection working, and increase your overall Internet speed.
The Most Important Vista Internet Speed Tweaks â" Once You Can Connect
New technology is fabulous when it works, but I was quite disgusted to learn that Microsoft implemented IPv6 on Vista and upon install it is set as the default. The silly part is that it simply doesnât work well with devices that still utilize the IPv4 protocol â" and to assume that most home networks are fully upgraded to the IPv6 protocol is a faulty approach to setting defaults.Many people upgrade their PCs and laptops long before they consider replacing that old outdated router thatâs been sitting in the basement for five years and still works perfectly. So, when they bring home that shiny new laptop with Vista installed, guess what â" the laptop and the router simply refuse to talk.
So, if youâre unlucky enough to find yourself in this situation â" the very first thing you should do before we can even get started speeding up the Internet, is to disable IPv6 so that you can at least get on the Internet in the first place. Hereâs how it works.
First, go to Start -> Network -> Network and Sharing Center, and then click on âManage Network Connections.â
In this screen, youâll likely have a wireless connection displaying that it canât connect to any network. Right-click on that icon and select âProperties.â
Vista Connection Tweak #2 â" Autotuning
This is another case where the cutting edge technological advances being enabled on Microsoftâs operating system by default is a recipe for disaster for users who have older networks and older network devices (specifically older routers). Vista comes installed and enabled with something called âReceive Window Auto-Tuning.âOn advanced networks, itâs actually a pretty cool technology where the transfer of data is monitored and Vista automatically âtunesâ the TCP window field to optimize packet transfer. Older routers simply do not âplay niceâ when it comes to that kind of window resizing. This spells trouble for home users who donât know the difference between a packet of data and a packet of sugar. What was Microsoft thinking?
Luckily â" thereâs a way for you, the home user, to turn this default feature off as well. First, click on âStartâ and type âcmdâ and right-click on the command icon. Youâll see the following window.
Vista Tweak #3 To Increase Internet Speed â" Take Back Your Bandwidth
Another unnecessary default setting that Vista (and actually XP as well) comes with is a 20% âreserveâ of your available bandwidth in order to accommodate certain applications like Windows Update. This tweak is a pretty common one most old-school users of XP already know â" itâs not at all detrimental and you can immediately gain 20% of your bandwidth back, increasing Internet performance significantly.This is called the QoS Reserve Bandwidth Limit, and to reduce this on any version of Vista you need to edit the registry.
Go to Start and type âregeditâ. You may have to deal with the UAC, unless youâve read Sharninderâs advice on how to speed up your Vista by turning it off! In Regedit, navigate to âHKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESOFTWAREPoliciesMicrosoftWindowsâ
Vista Tweak #4 â" Modify Your Browser For Optimum Speed
Believe it or not, not only is your Vista operating system not configured by default to blaze the Internet as fast as possible, but neither is your Internet browser! These instructions include how to increase your browsing speed on Firefox and IE.First, in Firefox type, âabout:configâ into the address bar (and ignore any warnings). In the filter field, type ânetworkâ and scroll down to ânetwork.http.pipeliningâ and set it to TRUE, and set ânetwork.http.pipelining.maxrequestsâ from 4 to anything from 8 to 12.
Vista Tweak #5 â" Increase DNS Cache
This tweak is one that anyone should do anyway, as it can significantly save time while surfing the web, especially if you tend to visit the same sites often. What the DNS cache does is store information retrieved from the nameservers (IP information) so that the next time you visit the same site, your browser doesnât have to waste time retrieving the same information from the DNS servers.You can optimize this by increasing the size of your DNS cache. This is another registry edit â" so go back in there (Start and type âregeditâ) and navigate to âHKEY_LOCAL_MACHINESYSTEMCurrentControlSetServicesDnscacheParametersâ and then right click on the white space at the right and add four DWORD values: CacheHashTableBucketSize, CacheHashTableSize, MaxCacheEntryTtlLimit and MaxSOACacheEntryTtlLimit.
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