Sunday 24 February 2013

Internet Speed Booster



Internet Speed Booster is the powerful easy way to speed up your internet connection. With Internet Speed Booster you can speed up you internet connection, utilize your memory, utilize your internet connection and change your windows settings. The main window consists of the following items: Speed Booster, Net Pinger, Ram Booster and System Settings. The Speed Booster contais the Wizard mode, Advanced mode, and Backup manager. The Net Pinger contains Pingr settings. The Ram Booster consists of the System status and Ram configuration. The System Settings contains Internet properties, System Settings, Modem Settings and Network Settings. To speed up your connection just choose one of the predefined connection settings and click Optimize Now. In Backup manager every time you change your settings the program will save your old settings. You can choose the backup file you want to restore or delete. The PING utility helps to keep you from getting your modem connection disconnected by your service provider. Most Internet Service Providers Disconnect users after a fixed period of modem activity. The option System Status in Ram Booster enables you to monitor your system resources. And you can optimize your memory with one click. You can adjust your ram booster settings from Ram Configuration form in Ram Booster. All the tools you need to be efficient on the Web!Boost and optimize the speed of your internet connection with this set of tools. Net Pinger prevents you from being disconnected from your ISP. Speed Booster optimizes the way your PC sends and receives data over the internet. RAM Booster allows you to free physical memory or RAM.

Web accelerator




A web accelerator is a proxy server that reduces web site access times. They can be a self-contained hardware appliance or installable software.

Web accelerators may be installed on the client (browsing) computer / mobile device, on ISP servers, on the server computer/network, or a combination. Accelerating delivery through compression requires some type of host based server to collect, compress and then deliver content to a client .

Ram Boost



Random-access memory (RAM) is a form of data storage. A random-access device allows stored data to be accessed in very nearly the same amount of time for any storage location, so data can be accessed quickly in any random order. In contrast, other data storage media such as hard disks, CDs, DVDs and magnetic tape, as well as early primary memory types such as drum memory, read and write data only in a predetermined order, consecutively, because of mechanical design limitations. Therefore the time to access a given data location varies significantly depending on its physical location.

Net Pinger




Ping is a network administration utility used to test the reachability of a host on an Internet Protocol (IP) network and to measure the round-trip time for messages sent from the originating host to a destination . The name comes from active sonar terminology which sends a pulse of sound and listens for the echo to detect objects underwater.

Ping operates by sending Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) echo request packets to the target host and waiting for an ICMP response. In the process it measures the time from transmission to reception (round-trip time) and records any packet loss. The results of the test are printed in the form of a statistical summary of the response packets received, including the minimum, maximum, and the mean round-trip times, and sometimes the standard deviation of the mean.

Ready Boost



Using Ready Boost-capable flash memory ( memory devices) for caching allows to service random disk reads with better performance than without the cache. This caching applies to all disk content, not just the page file or system DLLs. Flash devices typically are slower than a mechanical hard disk for sequential I/O, so, to maximize performance, ReadyBoost includes logic that recognizes large, sequential read requests and has the hard disk service these requests.