Internet.Download.Manager.6.32.Build.11.Retail.exe - Google Drive PORTABLE
If $50 or so is too much and your computer is old, has a hard drive rather than an SSD (see below), and has little RAM, you could try using ReadyBoost with a USB stick. It caches data on the portable storage device's storage to speed up memory access that would be slower with a spinning hard drive. Just go to the USB key's File Explorer entry, right-click to open Properties, and switch to the ReadyBoost tab to get going. For most up-to-date systems, this feature won't be available and would provide no performance boost.
Internet.Download.Manager.6.32.Build.11.Retail.exe - Google Drive
Installing and running demanding applications such as Adobe Photoshop happens much faster with an SSD. An SSD also greatly benefits Windows at startup. Apps from the Microsoft Store can easily be moved from a spinning hard drive to an SSD in Settings' Apps and Features page.
For system speedup, it makes sense to replace your internal startup hard drive, and if you use a laptop, this may also be an option. But an external SSD with a USB 3.0 connection can also give you a speed boost in applications that use a lot of storage. For help in choosing which device to install, check out PCMag's list of the best SSDs.
EDIT 2: if I set the virtual harddrive as multiattached instead of immutable, then it works fine. In my case is enough, but I know that it would be work as immutable because it was work until now and it works in another computer.
The only thing that solved the issue for me is to unmount the second hard disk on my laptop.My current setup contains 1 HDD on SATA0 port and 1 SSD on SATA1 port. I've the OS and Oracle VirtualBox installed on the SSD drive.When I deleted the partition on the HDD, the issue was solved. 041b061a72