Win EAS unlock

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There wasn’t anything much on it was used only for word processing/accounts, few pictures.
Speeds were great for the time 1Ghz processor with 2x 256mb ram thingys. HD not anywhere full as mostly backed up on 4 1/2” floppy.

A: \ >..”load”... :D
C: \ > chkdsk :D:D:D
 
There wasn’t anything much on it was used only for word processing/accounts, few pictures.
Speeds were great for the time 1Ghz processor with 2x 256mb ram thingys. HD not anywhere full as mostly backed up on 4 1/2” floppy.

A: \ >..”load”... :D
C: \ > chkdsk :D:D:D

As long as you kept the steam inlet from blocking it would have been fine.:D:D
 
Still got it somewhere, attic maybe?
My BECM would give it run for its money :p

I have a desktop that i built for general use running Windows 7 professional. Athlon Quad 640 3 gig processor 4Gb Ram. Gaming graphics card. Very quick if kept clean. An old serial port DELL i used for EASunlock, now redundant. An ACER running XP that needs reformatting. It is painful to even switch on never mind use. And a Lenovo running Windows 10 that tells Microsoft when you burp or fart. And downloads that many updates it fills the hard drive in no time. It has lots of stupid stuff on it i don't need. If you delete stuff it puts it back on the week after. Total waste of space.
 
Computers are like anything else, clog them up and they slow down. The train time from Preston to Glasgow is 2 hr 22 mins. But if every trip they added a truck with 20 tons of coal in then another next time to it, the time would progressively increase to the point that the engine would not be able to pull the weight. With a computer you have to clean the crap out of it on a regular basis.
XP home requires 125Mbyte of RAM and 1.5gig HDD space, Win7 home requires 2 gig RAM and 16 gig HDD space, every instruction in a line of code requires a fetch cycle from memory or from HDD, every fetch cycle requires a finite amount of time, the more code required to perform a function the longer it takes, memory and HDD speeds are limited and although there are dodges like prefetch to speed things up, you cannot get away from the fact the bigger the OS becomes the more time it takes to do things no matter how much Microsoft tray to brainwash people into believing otherwise.

Mainstream support for Win7 ended on January 13th 2015. Win 8 being a disaster, security support for Win 7 was extended, it ends on 14th January 2020 unless extended again. There is talk of support being extended until 2023, but I have not seen any confirmation of that, maybe that's when Windows 11 is coming out.:rolleyes:
 
XP home requires 125Mbyte of RAM and 1.5gig HDD space, Win7 home requires 2 gig RAM and 16 gig HDD space, every instruction in a line of code requires a fetch cycle from memory or from HDD, every fetch cycle requires a finite amount of time, the more code required to perform a function the longer it takes, memory and HDD speeds are limited and although there are dodges like prefetch to speed things up, you cannot get away from the fact the bigger the OS becomes the more time it takes to do things no matter how much Microsoft tray to brainwash people into believing otherwise.

Mainstream support for Win7 ended on January 13th 2015. Win 8 being a disaster, security support for Win 7 was extended, it ends on 14th January 2020 unless extended again. There is talk of support being extended until 2023, but I have not seen any confirmation of that, maybe that's when Windows 11 is coming out.:rolleyes:

Just like the Glasgow train then. The machine has to be cleaned of all none needed stuff on a regular basis. It has to be defragmented on a regular basis so that it finds things quicker. If your machine has minimal requirements it will slow down as more is loaded. That is a given. So you minimise the crap you don't need to help it work. Restore points for instance, out of date files and registry data. It all helps.
 
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