Win 8 service item: It is not easy to load when you want to boot.

  

Windows 7 has been optimized to greatly reduce the time required for startup. At the same time, Microsoft is working harder to make Windows 8 boot performance. There is a greater improvement.

A common criticism of Windows is that bloated calls to too many system service items, especially during the startup process, load a large number of service items. In the discussion of the newly-launched Building Windows 8 blog, some users mentioned again that there is no reason to load all services at boot time. The implication is that Microsoft can improve system performance and reduce hardware requirements by reducing the loading of system service items.

Larry Osterman, a veteran of Microsoft, believes that unnecessary service items should not be loaded at boot time; even if the service must be loaded, optimization should be used to further reduce resource usage. In fact, Windows should conduct a rigorous review every day to avoid unauthorized access. Each service should ensure that it has its own existence when it starts loading.

Every service that is loaded when Windows 7 starts is very important. The services on the startup list have been compressed to a minimum. Some auto-start services take up only a few hundred bytes of virtual memory and basically do not take up physical memory. When it comes to the Windows 8 boot process, there is no reason to believe that Microsoft will cancel the above strategy.

Microsoft's inherent pressure is definitely to start faster and faster. Fortunately, with the advancement of hardware technology, Win8 can provide unprecedented guidance services. For example, on a machine with UEFI and SSDs, the Windows 8 system boot takes only 6 seconds.

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