Moving the Page File
This is a debatable tweak some say its faster some say there is hardly any difference, my self i believe it to be an improvement within a systems structure.
Windows uses its page file as a temporary workspace, and if this workspace is to small Windows will run slowly the optimum size is about one and a half times of memory in your PC (Ram), so if you have 512MB of Ram your page file should be at least 768MB within C: and that's room you could use also Windows may work faster if the page file is on a different drive to Windows (a separate physical HDD).
To execute this (in Windows XP Home / Pro SP2)
Click the start button, right-click My Computer and select Properties from the menu. Go to the Advanced tab and click the Settings button under Performance. Select the Advanced tab in the next window and click the Change button under Virtual Memory, all drives and partitions can now be seen. Set drive C: to the minimum 2MB and maximum 50MB, a minimum page file should be left in place on the boot partition as It is used in various circumstances by the system, Memory/crash dumps being the most important. Choose the second drive/1st partition and enter its values as before on C:,or setting a minimum and maximum of the same value is reasoned to stop fragmentation, (500MB min and 500MB max) Note 500MB is used just as an example figure (reboot to initialize). You now have more room on your C: drive and your PC may work faster, i have the Page File set as above on two of my four Computers.
Annabell 
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Abit AB9, Core 2 Duo E6420 Conroe, Corsair 2GB DDR2 XMS2 TwinX (matched pair), Asus GeForce 8800 GTS HTDP 640MB
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