speed up your computer

hello friends today i will show you how to speed up
your computer by disabling Bits

  
click win+r or go to start and click run now type msconfig and click ok..............



 when you click ok a new page appear now click on services 




 in services menu find Background Intelligent Transfer and unmark it




 that's it now check your computer speed

what is Background Intelligent Transfer


Use Background Intelligent Transfer Service (BITS) to transfer files asynchronously between a client and a server. There are three types of transfer jobs. A download job downloads files to the client, an upload job uploads a file to the server, and an upload-reply job uploads a file to the server and receives a reply file from the server application. BITS 1.2 and earlier: Upload and upload-reply jobs are not supported. BITS continues to transfer files after an application exits if the user who initiated the transfer remains logged on and a network connection is maintained. BITS will not force a connection. BITS suspends the transfer if a connection is lost or if the user logs off. BITS persists transfer information while the user is logged off, across network disconnects, and during computer restarts. When the user logs on again, BITS resumes the user's transfer job. For more information, see Users and Network Connections. BITS provides one foreground and three background priority levels that you use to prioritize transfer jobs. Higher priority jobs preempt lower priority jobs. Jobs at the same priority level share transfer time, which prevents a large job from blocking small jobs in the transfer queue. Lower priority jobs do not receive transfer time until all higher priority jobs are complete or in an error state. Background transfers are optimal in that BITS uses idle network bandwidth to transfer the files and will increase or decrease the rate at which files are transferred based on the amount of idle network bandwidth available. If a network application begins to consume more bandwidth, BITS decreases its transfer rate to preserve the user's interactive experience. BITS uses the Windows Branch Cache for peer caching. For more information, see the Branch Cache Overview. BITS 3.0: Starting with Windows 7, the BITS 3.0 peer caching model is deprecated. If BITS 4.0 is installed, the BITS 3.0 peer caching model is unavailable. For more information, see Peer Caching.

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