<para>The first section of this dialog is labeled <guilabel>Minimize Memory Usage</guilabel> and has three options which determine maximum number of instances of &konqueror; that can be open on one machine at any one time.</para>
<note><para>Do not confuse &konqueror; instances, with &konqueror; windows or tabs. The number of konqueror instances is determined by &tde; not by the user. You can think of instances as the hidden data of your &konqueror; windows and tabs. One &konqueror; instance can contain the data for multiple windows or tabs. Your choice on the following radio buttons does not limit the number of windows you can open at one time, but rather, how many instances of &konqueror; you can have open.</para>
<para>The reason the choices you make in this dialog box are important is evident when something goes wrong and &konqueror; is forced to close an instance. <emphasis>All &konqueror; windows associated with a &konqueror; instance must be closed immediatly (without time to save data or bookmark locations).</emphasis> Therefore, the more instances you can have open at one time, the less likely a problem in one instance will affect all of your work. Each instance requires more memory which can be a problem on systems with less system memory.</para></note>
<listitem><para>There are no restraints. Any number of &konqueror; instances can be open at any one time. The advantage of this option is if any &konqueror; instance crashes the remaining will be unaffected. The disadvantage is that each &konqueror; instance uses more memory.</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>If this option is selected, you can have as many as you want &konqueror; instances open that are browsing the web, but only one instance of &konqueror; for file management.</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>If this option is selected, you can only have one instance of &konqueror; running at any one time. This saves system memory, but if your &konqueror; window crashes, all your browsing windows close immediatly without warning. This should only be used for seriously memory limited systems.</para></listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
</sect3>
<sect3><title>Preloading</title>
<para>The subsection labeled <guilabel>Preloading</guilabel> also makes a tradeoff between memory and performance.</para>
<para><emphasis>Preloading</emphasis> refers to loading an instance of &konqueror; into memory before a user asks to start &konqueror;. The positive effect of this is that when a user asks &tde; to load &konqueror; the window appears instantly
This means that the next time a user wants &konqueror; loaded, it is nearly instantanous again.</para>
<para>The spinbox labeled <guilabel>Maximum number of instances kept preloaded:</guilabel> can be used to adjust the maximum number of preloaded instances. This option does not affect instances when they are loaded. It also does not limit the number of instances that can be used by active windows. It only affects the number of preloaded instances.</para>
<para>The checkbox labeled <guilabel>Preload an instance after &tde; startup</guilabel> does just what it says. It tells
&tde; to preload one instance of &konqueror; at the startup of &tde;.</para>
<note><para>This does extend the startup time for &tde;.</para></note>
<para>The final checkbox labeled <guilabel>Always try to have at least one preloaded instance</guilabel> signals to &tde; that you always want &tde; to have one preloaded, but not used, instance of &konqueror; available. This option will actually decrease performance on some machines (especially those with limited physical memory).</para>
<para>When &tde; starts, it checks several directories for changes to configuration. Most of these changes relate to installation and uninstalling applications to the computer. This scan extends the startup time for &tde; and many times this scan is not needed as the configuration is current from the last time &tde; was started. When the configuration has changed &tde; uses this scan to update various datafiles to ensure a smooth user experience.</para>
<warning><para>You are given the option to skip this initial scan during startup. &tde; developers strongly suggest you do not disable this scan because of the potential to introduce instability into your system.</para>
<listitem><para>&tde; will wait to perform the scan until after &tde; has started. This scan will be performed after the desktop is loaded.</para></listitem>
<listitem><para>In the event of a crash, &tde; will not perform a backtrace because your problem may be related to the delayed scan.</para></listitem>