Jake wrote:I would also like to know if running DB Cache Reloaded is safe (or necessary) with this plugin. I have been running it with Hyper Cache and found good results.
Nope, not necessary. DB Cache Reloaded is all about optimizing MySQL queries. Quick Cache goes way beyond this, and avoids any database connections at all; because it caches pages after they're generated. Having the DB Cache Reloaded plugin installed along with Quick Cache, is NOT going to increase speed.
The author of this plugin "DB Cache Reloaded", has provided a very confusing description for his software.
In his description, he states:
I think you've heard of WP-Cache or WP Super Cache, they are both top plugins for WordPress, which make your site faster and responsive. Forget about them - with DB Cache Reloaded your site will work much faster and will use less disk space for cached files. Your visitors will always get actual information in sidebars and server CPU loads will be as low as possible.
He is comparing apples to oranges. A DB Cache plugin might be better if you're not concerned that much about speed, and you just want to optimize WordPress a "little bit". Caching database queries WILL speed up your site. However, it will NOT speed it up more than Quick Cache, or WP Super Cache will.
The DB Cache Reloaded plugin, WILL improve the speed of your site, because it caches MySQL DB queries, giving WordPress less work to do. However, it does NOT cache pages after they've been generated. So all of the PHP processing routines, along with several DB queries that just cannot be cached, must still be processed for each and every page view.
The DB Cache Reloaded plugin, and others like it, are not comparable to Quick Cache or to WP Super Cache. They take two completely different approaches. Quick Cache stores snapshots of entire pages, and DB Cache Reloaded, caches only database queries.
The result is that DB Cache Reloaded will always be slower. That is not to say it's better or worse than Quick Cache. It just depends on what you'd prefer, and the way your site is designed. If you can get away with running Quick Cache, your site will be faster overall. If you can't ( i.e. your site depends on dynamic content at all times ), then running DB Cache Reloaded is better than nothing at all.