M wrote:
>My PC is about 5 yrs old Win XP Home is about all I know at this point.
>
>I bought it just to work the internet. It has slowed down as of late
>and would like an easily understanable way to get things moving along
>again. >>
There are many possibilities, it's impossible to say without knowing a lot
more about your computer and how you use it.
1. The commonest reason is having too many programs running in the
background. Go to Start button/Run and type msconfig. Then click on the
"startup" tab and there you will see most of the things running every time
you reboot your computer. Ideally, disable all of them, reboot, and see if
that makes any difference. Msconfig won't allow you to disable anything
vital to the system, so you are quite safe. And you can retick the boxes
later if you want to put anything back into startup. Keep your startups to
the bare essentials such as antivirus if you can. If you don't recognise
it, you can probably do without it!
2. Certain Services in XP are notorious resource hogs and should be
disabled. Run msconfig again, this time click the Services tab. It will
show you all running services. Untick each service you want to disable.
Services which are well-known to slow the system are any Indexing services
(eg Fast Indexing), and Fast User Switching. Untick these. There are many
other services which are unnecessary, but usually they do not cause
problems. There are many tutorials available on the internet if you want to
investigate that further. Just Google for "disable services xp". Don't turn
off services that you aren't sure about--many of these are essential.
3. Any programs which are set to auto-update can screw performance up if
they are unable for any reason to connect home. While they are trying to
"phone out" (like spyware), valuable resources are being used at the cost
of performance.
4. If performance was once OK but has gradually slowed down, adding extra
memory will NOT help unless you have installed a lot of additional
software. It is often cited as a "cure-all" fix for performance, but unless
your computer is otherwise clean, it will only help if RAM is critically
low. You don't state how much RAM you have, but for XP, 512Mb is minimum
and generally quite adequate for your needs. Performance will likely fall
off easily with anything less than this.
5. In a few cases, firewalls or internet security suites can cause horrible
slowdowns (Nortons used to be notorious for this, though the 2007 version
appears much improved). Try disconnecting your phone line if you're on
broadband, then disable any security software. Reboot and see if that makes
any difference.
6. If your emailer is Outlook Express, don't forget to empty its deleted
mail folder regularly. That can cause problems if allowed to get overfull.
7. After 5 years without a reformat or registry restore, I'm not at all
surprised that your computer is slowing. Over time, a lot of junk
accumulates in the registry and system files. If these aren't cleaned out
every year or two (depending on your use) the system will become clogged
and slow down.
You may well find that, in the end, rather than spending endless hours
looking for causes and possibly getting nowhere, it's much quicker and
easier to bite the bullet, save all your data and settings, and reformat
the hard drive. Reinstall XP, and your computer will be like brand new again.
You will, of course, have to reinstall all your programs, but that really
shouldn't take too long. It's without doubt the best way, and often the
only way, to really bring back original performance.
And, no, you can't just "Clean out RAM". The nearest you can do to that is
to restore the registry---and that pre-supposes that you have made regular
registry backups. For that, you need a freeware called ERUNT which will
keep any registry backups you make. It's a quick and easy task which should
be done regularly. Sadly, many people don't do it.
Relying on XP's System Restore is of very limited use, and can be very
unreliable.
Yes, the hard drive CAN be used to increase virtual memory, but it's much
much slower than RAM, so is unlikely to help you. If incorrectly set, it
will slow things even more. Over the years, I've fiddled around with
various recommended settings for Virtual Memory, but any theoretical gains
have been more in my imagination than real, I think. It's not a fix for
other things that are wrong in the system.
Don Penlington
From the Beach at Surfers Paradise in sunny Queensland.
Computer tutorials, local scenery, and other things at my website:
http://users.tpg.com.au/deepend/index1.html
Visit our website regularly for FAQs,
articles, how-to's, tech tips and much more
http://freepctech.com
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