Emile:
Hello, I don't think you can because cache data is compress data; so there for, data that is already compress can not be recompress without lossing importing information in the procces.
Vienna:
They already have that.
Boworn:
Bug fixs are always on the list:), but I do agree 100%.
Everyone else:
Well I think eboostr still has a lot of life still. SSD are still perty high and a lot of ppl want storage vs speed still. I think eboostr should sell it self as a way to turn their SSD into a hybrid SSD/HDD so both partys come out strong such as Intel and OCZ are doing. With eboostr as software, it'll become a cheaper way vs the way thos two are going about it.
As for ram... computers are comming more and more with ram, but even on 64 bit os, software only takes/uses about 4-6GBs... One way windows 7 trys to hide that fact is, window 7 will "use" the rest of that ram up as caching for when you click on something else or release it as a program needs more space in ram. I don't see the goal for eboostr in this area using ram on 64bit OS as cache, but eboostr could do something like this instead:
(Windows 7, or even linx, doesn't know what you are about to start/run. When a program is told to run/load, it goes throw both the ram and disk to find where it is. Random IO becomes very important in how fast a program will start up and write as it neededs. To combat this, system programmer made cache to help lession that randomness to small already loaded files. One way eboostr can also combat this is by loading cache data when the user mouse is above a icon (icon being a image, short-cut, program (such as a .exe), and whatever) to lession even more read from the disk.
That is fine, but read is only half the story. Here is where Eboostr can shine also by learning what a program likes to write out and at what time(s). For example, if a program tends to like to write small 4k files, instead of saving them to the disk, ebsootr can save it to the flash drive to save time then slowly rewrite it back to the disk as a copy. It can also tell the HDD to get ready to write by having the head of the HDD already waiting at the area by writing a small file a head of time because new data has to be writen on the outside of the disk so not to clash with other data blocks.)
Readyboost will become a thing of the past once SSD become mainstream, but I think eboostr can still live on as long as it grows too.