Does saving files on the Desktop slow a computer?

by entry
22 replies
Is it true, having all your big files +folders on your desktop slows your computer down?

as windows accesses all these at the startup?

Where do you people have your files, and where is the best place/directory to store them?
#computer #desktop #files #saving #slow
  • Profile picture of the author trapp120
    I use a mac, but if you saw my desktop you would freak out. I probably have 300 files sitting on there. The only time my comp is ever slow is when I've got Dreamweaver and Photoshop open at the same time, and that's only if there are multiple projects going on in each.
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  • Profile picture of the author RGallowitz
    I believe it does. When my desktop gets clogged up, my pc responds way slower.
    So there has to be some sort of correlation.


    Reinhardt
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  • Profile picture of the author Steven Fullman
    Originally Posted by entry View Post

    Is it true, having all your big files +folders on your desktop slows your computer down?

    as windows accesses all these at the startup?

    Where do you people have your files, and where is the best place/directory to store them?
    It does slow things down...but not a lot.

    The reason is, windows has to redraw the screen everytime you want to see your desktop. So, it has to grab the icon files from wherever they are on your PC, put them in the right place, and render them.

    I put my files on Amazon S3

    The computer is the cloud these days...and vice-versa.

    Steve
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    Not promoting right now

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    • Profile picture of the author entry
      Originally Posted by Steven Fullman View Post

      It does slow things down...but not a lot.

      The reason is, windows has to redraw the screen everytime you want to see your desktop. So, it has to grab the icon files from wherever they are on your PC, put them in the right place, and render them.

      I put my files on Amazon S3

      The computer is the cloud these days...and vice-versa.

      Steve
      What do you mean by render them? and where is the right place on the windows hardrive?
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    • Profile picture of the author tomw
      Originally Posted by Steven Fullman View Post

      It does slow things down...but not a lot.

      The reason is, windows has to redraw the screen everytime you want to see your desktop. So, it has to grab the icon files from wherever they are on your PC, put them in the right place, and render them.

      I put my files on Amazon S3

      The computer is the cloud these days...and vice-versa.

      Steve
      What is Amazon S3?

      I use

      http://www.spideroak.com

      Check it out. It's has an auto backup feature that you can sync across any number of computers, access and sync to any other number of computers anywhere. It's amazing. You download a little local app and sync up all your desktops, laptops, etc or access online. It has the most secure system there is. You can share files etc with anyone by giving them a secure link. It even automatically stores historical versions of all your files if you need it to. So you never lose a draft or work in progress design.

      Tom
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      • Profile picture of the author entry
        Originally Posted by tomw View Post

        What is Amazon S3?

        I use

        http://www.spideroak.com

        Check it out. It's has an auto backup feature that you can sync across any number of computers, access and sync to any other number of computers anywhere. It's amazing. You download a little local app and sync up all your desktops, laptops, etc or access online. It has the most secure system there is. You can share files etc with anyone by giving them a secure link. It even automatically stores historical versions of all your files if you need it to. So you never lose a draft or work in progress design.

        Tom
        I dunno about putting my files live.

        how secure is it, - as nothing is 100% secure
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        • Profile picture of the author tomw
          Originally Posted by entry View Post

          I dunno about putting my files live.

          how secure is it, - as nothing is 100% secure
          They're not "live." They're held securely, fractured and encrypted on a network of servers in multiple locations.

          Check out the site. It ain't no affiliate link! You get a bunch of gigs for free.



          Tom
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      • Profile picture of the author Steven Fullman
        What makes you trust them that they'll still be around in 5 years, though?

        Originally Posted by tomw View Post

        What is Amazon S3?

        I use

        http://www.spideroak.com

        Check it out. It's has an auto backup feature that you can sync across any number of computers, access and sync to any other number of computers anywhere. It's amazing. You download a little local app and sync up all your desktops, laptops, etc or access online. It has the most secure system there is. You can share files etc with anyone by giving them a secure link. It even automatically stores historical versions of all your files if you need it to. So you never lose a draft or work in progress design.

        Tom
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        Not promoting right now

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        • Profile picture of the author tomw
          Originally Posted by Steven Fullman View Post

          What makes you trust them that they'll still be around in 5 years, though?
          You b*gger

          I hadn't thought of that.

          But seriously, they're a huge company.

          What does Amazon S3 do? I thought it was for streaming or something?



          Tom
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          • Profile picture of the author Steven Fullman
            Tom,

            S3 + JungleDisk = peace of mind, delivery, security, huge storage and backup.

            Check it out!

            Steve

            JungleDisk not strictly necessary, but it makes everything so much easier and quicker.

            Originally Posted by tomw View Post

            You b*gger

            I hadn't thought of that.

            What does Amazon S3 do? I thought it was for streaming or something?

            Tom
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            Not promoting right now

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            • Profile picture of the author Martin Luxton
              Originally Posted by Steven Fullman View Post

              Tom,

              S3 + JungleDisk = peace of mind, delivery, security, huge storage and backup.

              Check it out!

              Steve

              JungleDisk not strictly necessary, but it makes everything so much easier and quicker.

              Steve,

              Looked at Jungledisk. S3 versus Rackspace - differences/pros and cons?

              Does it offer the possibility of offering other people limited access like Spideroak?


              CDarklock,

              If you send me a copy of the NDA I'll get my lawyer to look it over to see if there are any loopholes

              The one thing I found that really messed up my computer was MSN Messenger. It keep freezing and crashing my system. I got rid of it and normal service resumed.


              Martin
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              • Profile picture of the author Ken Strong
                I've been getting increasingly annoyed with how slow my laptop runs -- after seeing this thread I just moved a ton of crap off my Desktop and put in My Documents. The computer immediately began running much more quickly -- thanks!
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              • Profile picture of the author CDarklock
                Originally Posted by Martin Luxton View Post

                If you send me a copy of the NDA I'll get my lawyer to look it over to see if there are any loopholes
                When you have an NDA with an 800-pound gorilla, those are actually called "traps"
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    • Profile picture of the author patJ
      Originally Posted by Steven Fullman View Post

      It does slow things down...but not a lot.

      The reason is, windows has to redraw the screen everytime you want to see your desktop. So, it has to grab the icon files from wherever they are on your PC, put them in the right place, and render them.

      I put my files on Amazon S3

      The computer is the cloud these days...and vice-versa.

      Steve
      Icons are usually stored in the RAM and are only accessed once on startup.

      But yes and no. It depends on how much free space you have available. A full HDD will be slower because of the lack of virtual memory. It does not matter where you put the files though, since they are written randomly to the HDD. After a while the HDD usually become fragmented which slows it down. Then it's time for defragmentation.
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      • Profile picture of the author Kris.Sm
        Originally Posted by patJ View Post

        Icons are usually stored in the RAM and are only accessed once on startup.

        But yes and no. It depends on how much free space you have available. A full HDD will be slower because of the lack of virtual memory. It does not matter where you put the files though, since they are written randomly to the HDD. After a while the HDD usually become fragmented which slows it down. Then it's time for defragmentation.

        That is a great answer. my desktop is crowded as well. i uninstalled a few unwanted programs and did a defragmentation (which took a loong time) but got the results, its much faster now. Also removed a few startup programs tht was not needed.
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    • Profile picture of the author CDarklock
      Originally Posted by Steven Fullman View Post

      The computer is the cloud these days...and vice-versa.
      Ooh, ooh, let me tell you... dammit! Damned NDA! I'm not allowed to talk about this yet! Dammit, dammit, dammit!

      JUST WAIT
      Signature
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  • Profile picture of the author mywebwork
    The Windows Desktop is actually just another folder, it's a unique folder simply because it's contents are displayed on your desktop. Ideally you only should be placing shortcuts on the desktop but many people do use it for file storage.

    There are couple of reasons that doing this can slow your computer down:

    1 - The more items on the desktop, be it files or shortcuts, the longer it takes to draw the screen. On most modern computers this isn't really a big issue.

    2 - Your desktop is part of your Windows Profile. When you logoff or shutdown the contents of your profile are saved. If you have files (as opposed to shortcuts) in your profile then this process will take longer.

    3 - Item 2 is especially a concern if you are on a Windows network and are using "Roaming Profiles". Unless you are in a corporate environment you probably don't do that. This is the situation where saving items on the desktop can severely slow down your computers login and logoff time - the whole profile is saved to your network share on logoff and reloaded to your desktop when you log in. I've seen profiles that take over 5 minutes to load because the user has saved everything to the desktop.

    Personally I have only 1 item on my entire desktop on all my Windows machines - my Recycle bin. I no longer use desktop icons, I place my most used program icons in the QuickLaunch taskbar instead. I really like the clean look it gives my desktop.

    Bill
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  • Profile picture of the author AceHazel
    Got some couple of tips from here. Personally, I put all my important files on my hard drives. I don't really like to see my files stacked on my desktop.
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  • Profile picture of the author Anup Mahajan
    I believe if you have less space on your working drive (where your OS is installed) then your computer would be slow.. I have myself seen messages that your working drive is full or something similar when my C drive was almost full..

    Since the Desktop folder is created on the same drive as the drive in which your OS is installed your computer will get slow if you have huge files on desktop.. If however you have hundreds of text files on your desktop, I don't believe it would affect your computer much... I had a senior in my office who had thousands of text files on his desktop.. yeah sounds crazy but it was true but his computer didn't seem that slow to me...

    Hope that helps,


    Cheers,
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  • Profile picture of the author actionplanbiz
    Originally Posted by entry View Post

    Is it true, having all your big files +folders on your desktop slows your computer down?

    as windows accesses all these at the startup?

    Where do you people have your files, and where is the best place/directory to store them?
    yes it does, organize them into folders in your documents
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  • Profile picture of the author SageSound
    I have a folder somewhere named "Downloads" and I have many sub-folders in it to help me organize things in some reasonable manner.

    If you've got Windows Vista or 7, you should either put it into your "My Documents" folder, or in the root of another drive (other than C.

    As has been mentioned, you're best to have only shortcuts on your desktop.

    Mac's OS X uses a completely different way of managing things, so stuff on the desktop isn't as much of a problem. (I have the greatest problems in my Mac due to how much memory leakage and CPU overhead the various browsers consume.)

    -David
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  • Profile picture of the author madison_avenue
    I have a lots of files on my desktop: The reason being is that if I put then into a My Documents folder I usually forget about them. When I am working on a theory or new ideas I like everything in front of me. Hundreds of times I have had a great idea by looking something at I put into my desktop and it is in front of me. In a document's folder everything just gets forgotten about, important links don't get visited, there could be potential revenue earner on there. As the driving force in my business, is up to to me come up with new ideas and this is how I like to work others may have a different approach.

    There is a programme called autoruns from sysinternals.com which lets you decide what you want to ran as start up which use to cut start up time . The thing which slows the system down is the start up programmes being loaded. Be careful what you disable though!

    For back up I have a complete backed up cloned hard disk which is regularly updated.
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