F
[FiS]Prophetus|PUF
Guest
I'm not on my computer (work comp with NT) right now so bear with me. Try this:
First Defrag every partition. Don't run any programs when it finishes.
Goto Virtual memory and unclick "Let window mangage...". Click on manually (not sure if it says that, but you know what I mean) configure virtual memory. A message will pop up saying don't do this...microsoft frowns...blah...blah. Set the virtual memory to a partition other than the one you are using now (if you have it set to use C: drive, then set to D: drive, or whatever partition letter you use). Use 2.5 times the amount of ram installed in your comp. In your case, you have 128 megs. So, type in 320 megs. Defrag the old drive virtual memory was using (not the one you just set it to). After it finishes, goto virtual mem. again and reset it to the C: drive with 320 megs. Now, virtual mem is totally defragged and clean.
What happens is when you defrag your drives, VM is left untouched. Normally, programs will be erased from VM, but not all the time. Windows will use alot of megs for VM. This causes the VM to be fragged too much and sometimes a "not enough mem availble message appears". The best thing to do is create another partition(example, H: drive) of 320 to 500 megs. Make it your VM drive. Then instead of just defragging the drive, like above, you can reformat the drive totally cleaning the VM. But, do the same steps as mentioned above for reformat. This helped me and UT runs great.
First Defrag every partition. Don't run any programs when it finishes.
Goto Virtual memory and unclick "Let window mangage...". Click on manually (not sure if it says that, but you know what I mean) configure virtual memory. A message will pop up saying don't do this...microsoft frowns...blah...blah. Set the virtual memory to a partition other than the one you are using now (if you have it set to use C: drive, then set to D: drive, or whatever partition letter you use). Use 2.5 times the amount of ram installed in your comp. In your case, you have 128 megs. So, type in 320 megs. Defrag the old drive virtual memory was using (not the one you just set it to). After it finishes, goto virtual mem. again and reset it to the C: drive with 320 megs. Now, virtual mem is totally defragged and clean.
What happens is when you defrag your drives, VM is left untouched. Normally, programs will be erased from VM, but not all the time. Windows will use alot of megs for VM. This causes the VM to be fragged too much and sometimes a "not enough mem availble message appears". The best thing to do is create another partition(example, H: drive) of 320 to 500 megs. Make it your VM drive. Then instead of just defragging the drive, like above, you can reformat the drive totally cleaning the VM. But, do the same steps as mentioned above for reformat. This helped me and UT runs great.