havnt checked(because im ignoring it) if any of that affects nvidia dpc latency.Hellbovine test this, its stable here with no visible problems.
grab mbk1969s PowerSettingsExplorer ,,,,,,,,,,,,,
Sorry if this has been asked , but it wasen't clear unless I missed something, can this be use ob all editions? Specifically Pro and Enterprise?
This guide was designed using Home edition, which is a common edition among consumers, but the most difficult to work with because it isn't as easy to customize things compared to the others, since they have more policy-related options available and/or have less features, such as LTSC.Sorry if this has been asked , but it wasen't clear unless I missed something, can this be use ob all editions? Specifically Pro and Enterprise?
On my w7 eoes test install the task is disabled and i cannot enable it although i can run it.SPP service defaults to Automatic (delayed). There's a midnight scheduled task,
TRANSLATED -hola hellbovine , se puede activar de nuevo el firewall? valorant game no me deja jugar porque esta desactivado y el anticheat me marca error por lo mismo
I highly doubt having the firewall disabled would prevent any game or anti-cheat software from working, the opposite has always been true (enabling firewalls/antivirus cause problems for gamers). This has to be related to something else. Valorant's own support page tells people to add an exception for the game to the firewall too, which is effectively turning the firewall off for the game:Hello Hellbovine , can the firewall be enabled again? Valorant Game does not let me play because it is disabled and the anticheat marks me error for the same reason
There isn't an "optimal" plan in Windows, do you mean the "Balanced" or "Ultimate" power plan?why not enable optimal performance power plan in Reg_0_NTLite rather than high performance
Ultimate sorryThere isn't an "optimal" plan in Windows, do you mean the "Balanced" or "Ultimate" power plan?
Ultimate is not really a power plan, it's what's called an "overlay" and it actually does the following:Ultimate
No worries, just wanted to clarify before I replied so I didn't talk about the wrong thing.
Ultimate is not really a power plan, it's what's called an "overlay" and what it actually does is the following:
- Pulls the default settings from the High performance plan to use when your computer is on AC power
- Pulls the default settings from the Balanced plan to use when your computer is on DC power
- Changes the hard drive timeout from 20 to 0, so the disks don't get turned off due to inactivity
The Ultimate "plan" is extremely overhyped in the media and it's created a lot of misinformation because of that. It's clear to me that none of the websites ever researched or tested it because all they did was regurgitate Microsoft's statements about latency, which was also extremely misleading compared to what it truly does.
Because the Ultimate plan uses Balanced for DC, it has less performance while on battery than the High performance plan. There is also no way to directly edit the Ultimate overlay because it pulls settings from other plans, so you have to modify the Balanced/High plans in order to modify the Ultimate plan (or modify the personality to use High performance for DC). It makes much more sense for people using NTLite to instead pick 1 plan and then edit that plan's defaults, instead of trying to essentially work with 3 plans at once.
I chose the High performance plan as my base and then I modify it to have even higher performing default settings. In effect, my setup here is better in performance than High/Ultimate and even the popular "Bitsum" power plan, all combined. Bitsum is also misleading, because it only changes 3 keys (on newer versions of W10) so that too is overhyped, as are a lot of core parking tools and s
I wouldn't be so quick to discount windows 11. I am noticing that an increasing number of the top 3dmark scores are on windows 11.I personally feel like W10 is better for performance-focused individuals, and I've listed my reasonings for this in all sorts of other posts/threads, including the intro to this guide. The Windows Statistics thread is worth checking out since it discusses some of those aspects (link).