An update on this one. One one of our newer Win7 computers, Pegasus was continuing to be really, really slow even though all other software seemed fine. We put up with it for years, but today it was solved in the process of trying to sort out a different network issue.
Now it's as slick as every other machine.
The solution is to go into your network card adaptors and DISABLE "Large Send Offload" for IPv4, and also for IPv6 if you use the latter. Worth doing it on your server's card settings as well as the client's. Huge difference for Pegasus, possibly for other stuff as well. Wish I'd found it long ago, so posting it here in case it helps others.
The setting in question makes the network card do some of the CPUs work in handling large transmissions. But with fast CPUs, it is not needed, and clearly its implementation is problematic on at least some cards, and for some software.
<p>An update on this one. One one of our newer Win7 computers, Pegasus was continuing to be really, really slow even though all other software seemed fine. We put up with it for years, but today it was solved in the process of trying to sort out a different network issue.
</p><p>&nbsp;Now it's as slick as every other machine.</p><p>&nbsp;The solution is to go into your network card adaptors and DISABLE "Large Send Offload" for IPv4, and also for IPv6 if you use the latter.&nbsp; Worth doing it on your server's card settings as well as the client's. Huge difference for Pegasus, possibly for other stuff as well. Wish I'd found it long ago, so posting it here in case it helps others.</p><p>&nbsp;The setting in question makes the network card do some of the CPUs work in handling large transmissions. But with fast CPUs, it is not needed, and clearly its implementation is problematic on at least some cards, and for some software.
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