Hmm, as a test I just opened a contact sheet with 136 NEFs (15-20MB) and 6 extreme panorama's (1-1.5GB each!) and do not suffer any computer slowdown to speak of. It does take a while before all of the images get their proper thumbnail, but at least I can continue working on something else.
Note, during the processing of the contact sheet, one of my CPU cores is maxed-out (which in my case still leaves 7 idle), and also the HD is at (almost) full throughput (±90MB/s). My images are all on a second internal HD though so my "normal" work is not really hampered by the load on that HD.
For comparison I tried to open the exact same folder in Adobe Bridge to see how that behaves. Well, CPU usage was a bit higher while disk load was lower. The thumbnails for the extreme tiffs were not updated from the very small initial size, however; no wonder it loaded quicker. Maybe my tiffs are actually too big (they're >30.000x4000) because the preview in Bridge didn't render them any bigger either. Quite useless
Based on this, a couple of things that may be relevant in your case:
* how many cores does your system have? 1, 2, more?
* how much cpu does the scanning alone consume?
* do you have a fast HD, and do you have everything on one HD or spread-out over more?
* how many MBs are your TIFFs?
And as Kirk already mentioned, it is not to be expected that (large) TIFFs display anyway quickly. One of the reasons being that they do not contain a high res preview (as do most camera files) and that in turn means the tiff needs to be processed completely before it can be rendered...
Hope this explains things a bit and/or points you in a direction to get some more speed.
Cheers,
Hayo