Hi Guys, My PC is pretty corrupted and so I need to reinstall windows and so I am looking to use nLite to strip my XP disc down to what I just need. Here are my specs: A 2001 DELL Dimension 8200 Intel Pentium P4 2.0Ghz Processor 100GB IDE HDD Creative sound blaster card ethernet Enabled hyper threading in the Bios 512MB DDR1 RAM DELL Monitor 4:3 native 1600x1200 DVI LCD 20.1 inch DVD/CD reader DVD/CD writer Floppy drive ATI RADEON 9800XT 256MB AGP GPU Windows XP Home Edition + Service Pack 3 wired mouse + keyboard I read somewhere that nLite can be used to strip XP right down and make the install size so small on your desktop that it can make windows boot in less than 5 seconds, is this true? I take it this only works with new PC's that have a very fast spec. Some people have said that nLite on my PC spec wouldn't make a difference and people have said that without nlite I would boot in 50 seconds. Which is pretty much the speed which I have always been able to boot windows at. Can nLite really make a difference? What I am looking to do is to strip XP right down to the things that I only need. I want to do some local video playback, photo playback, MP3 audio playback, no gaming locally. I want to use the PC as a home server connected via 802.11 b/g/n wifi dongle and wired ethernet. I want to make the PC more like a thin client where it runs most of the time in the cloud accessing word processing from google docs, yahoo docs, email from yahoo and gmail, and cloud gaming services like Onlive which support 720p gaming and only requires a users internet connection. 720p video playback of MPEG2 and WMV always worked flawlessly on this PC. So I would like to use nLite to firstly make the XP installation take up the least amount of space on my 100GB HDD. Like under 1GB with SP3 if possible? Then I want to remove IE and WMPlayer from XP. Now people have told me that using nlite to do all this is a waste of time and it's not going to make hardly any difference. I thought I could use nLite to strip my PC right down to it's bare essentials which should allocate more processing power for applications I want to run rather than the power going towards the whole operating system, But again people said it's not going to make much of an increase in speeds and said that I should just install XP from it's original disc. Then use nLite if I want for a slip streaming installation of SP3, what do you guys think? Would all the things I mentioned be better doing through nLite if I had a more recent PC with a better faster processor? Someone also said that if I did this all and used nlite then XP may not even run properly. is this true? I really like to read your opinion on this Any help much appreciated Many thanks in advance