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Intel Slashes Computer Startup Times

An anonymous reader writes "At Intel's Developer Forum in Taiwan, Intel introduced a new Non-volatile caching technology called 'Robson'." The new Robson cache technology allows computers to start up almost immediately and load programs much faster. Intel declined to comment on the specifics of how the technology works only saying that 'More information will be revealed later'.

4 of 435 comments (clear)

  1. DOH! by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 5, Informative

    From TFA:

    "Chipmaker demonstrates 'Robson' flash memory to boost laptop startup speeds."

    Mystery solved.

  2. Re:Boot times by amadeusb4 · · Score: 4, Informative
    To reduce boot, login and shutdown times, upgrade to Tiger (10.4). Here are times for mine(PB G4 with 768MB running 10.4.0):
    • boot to login = 29 sec.
    • login = ~25 sec (extended by startup items like iCal and stickies)
    • shutdown = 11 sec
    These numbers are a huge improvement to 10.3.9 running on my cube but then again the cube is nearly 5 years old.

    Regarding the non-volatile booting, I would like to point out that my C-64 was already doing that.

  3. Re:If they just took the crap out... by NotAnotherReboot · · Score: 5, Informative

    Someone feel free to correct me if I'm wrong, but Acrobat 7 finally fixed the issue of loading a bazillion plugins at startup that almost no one uses. I believe it now dynamically loads them as needed.

    Load times for Acrobat 7 vs. Acrobat 6 are clearly far less. The fix often mentioned is to delete/move non-key plugins from the Acrobat plugin folder, but their solution finally fixes the problem in an elegant way.

  4. To the OP - misunderstanding cameras, Doh! etc. by new500 · · Score: 4, Informative

    You complain about the zoom extending. Uhu, have you looked at compact multi-element zoom designs? 12 or more elements, many or even most of which geared independantly is not uncommon. The longer the zoom - comsumer guys want optical 10 times zooms, which would be unheard of in a professional lens for many other considerations (predominantly aperture speed and distortion characteristics) and that means even more complicated designs, even allowing small lenses are easier and simpler to design. Now try shifting all those elements _accurately_ with a tiny low voltage low torque servo (see why it's low torque here - too fe2w turns possible in such a small space to get a focus throw long enough to try to do this quickly and accurately and repeatably*). This is why my piezo-wave-effect ring-motor driven Nikkor zoom is several times more expensive of itself than almost any digicam.

    Got the idea?

    To the above poster - i sure hope there's not much calibration going on when i boot my Nikon. Unless it's to compensate for working temperature effects, if i've spent time and effort having a lens tuned to how i like it (yes this doesn't just happen, it's common) i want it to be left alone at that spec. Now that even modest digicams such as the Fuji F10/11 boot instantly and respond extremely quickly, there's simply no excuse for slow electronics and (electronic) shutter save at the real budget segment.

    * even some (sadly many) professional photogs insist on continuing the myth that because the lens / sensor is small, everything remains sharp because the DOF (depth of field) is greater in those conditions. Er, DOF is a psychological effect which is a function of the print enlargement factor, print size, viewing distance and airy dic resolving limit - so the assumption is not true at equivalent apertures, hence the need even in very small "format" cameras to _still_ focus accurately, in OP's case, sadly, slowly too. The effect observed is anecdotally true however at small print sizes like 6" by 4".