By rerun | November 17th, 2008 |
Installed for a week now and running smoot. 2 gb usb-stick filled with cache-files, and seems to speed up my XP-machine on all levels !
Question: Can i / is there a simple one-click feature for clearing the whole cache, so it can build itself again from scratch ??
greetings, Peter.
By Rootz | |
2GB USB flash and only fill 4%.
Is this normal? any report like this?
By Rootz | |
HI,
I just install beta realese.
Feedback you soon.
By deltarho | |
1GB USB flash drive, 512MB cache on 2GB RAM.
I’ve been using eBoostr since V1.0 and found that both media always achieved a 100% fill.
With V3 whilst both had a successful allocation, but the fill for the flash drive is 0% and an cache content and 50% for the RAM cache. Uninstalled/Installed no change. Tried different sticks, different ports – no change.
By DJ | |
I had to problems with the install. I could not set any devices to use. I had to uninstall/reinstall eBoostr in order to get it to work.
By xpugur | |
Eboostr works fine but after some time (may be 5 hours ) it stops working :S (seems suspended) i start caching again but it stops again…
By P.O. | |

Some entries in languages list don´t appear
By Mainframer | November 16th, 2008 |
I’ve encountered the following problems with Outlook 2002, which I’ve not seen before:
1) When clicking Send/Receive Outlook reported “The operation failed”. Closing and re-opening Outlook did not solve this problem. I rebooted, then
2) When Outlook started I received the message “Office has detected a significant change in your machine configuration” and activation is required. I reactivated the product, then
3) Filtering rules are no longer be followed for incoming email.
There are no messages that pertain to this problem in either the System or Application logs.
Thanks.
By Tintin N | |
if i use my ram as a cache file with eboostr but i have it at 0% caching does anything happen then?
Ex: i use 512 mb ram but it uses o% caching
By Mainframer | |
After resuming from hibernation the screen resolution was 800 x 600 pixels, not the pre-hibertnation value of 1440 x 900.