A friend of mine tells me that it will enhance PC performance by not allowing the Indexing Service to index your disk and the folders and subfolders of that disk.
In your opinion, is this correct?
For those who don't know how to check/activate/deactivate your indexing setup (at least with XP)....
Click My Computer, right-click disk, click on Properties and see if box at bottom is checked - if it is, your disk is being indexed.
There is some performance gain, don't know how much. If you disable it be sure to also disable the service so you can gain some RAM and CPU. Indexing must access every file so you will reduce disk access too.
The question is "Do you search for files very often ?" If you do, indexing is a good idea. Else, it isn't. I do one search a month, so I turned it off.
But if you're on an XP computer, indexing is pretty much useless. Vista/7's one is much better.