Originally posted by: labgeek
Originally posted by: arcenite
I am not even sure why I am answering this but, it all depends on if there are any bottlenecks present. Assuming no bottlenecks (64mb of ram, a 1000rpm hard drive, etc...) In other words... assuming your computer was build in the last few years...
The speed of the hard drive generally has the most influence on the speed that the computer boots up.
The processor has a bit to do with boot time as well, but not nearly as much. I only know this for a fact from measuring boot times from my stock 2.0 speeds and then at 2.5 speeds.
The RAM has very little to do with it unless, like I said, you have very little of it in the first place.
Bull...
I'm not sure why you're answering it either...
64MB of RAM will grind you system to a halt if you can even get it to boot.
XP Pro Requirements
128 megabytes (MB) of RAM or higher recommended (64 MB minimum supported; may limit performance and some features)
Edit - and a "1000rpm hard drive" - WTF? Where the he!! have you been? laptop = 4200, old slow drives = 5400, standard desktop drive = 7200, WD raptor = 10,000, decent scsi drives = 15,000