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| remsh85 | |||
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Group: Members Posts: 119 Member No.: 601 Joined: 09-November 07 |
I just got this new computer yesterday...it is so slow. Emails slow to create/reply to. Trying to get to a web page is slow. Is this normal??? I'm getting fed up. My other computer was Windows 98 and was way faster. Any suggestions appreciated.
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| Murielle |
Aug 3 2007, 04:46 PM | Tags: Computer
Slow
Related tags: Installation Posts Troubles Conversation Delete Files Laptop Defragmenter Precision |
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Group: Members Posts: 338 Member No.: 885 Joined: 07-April 08 |
Hi Cathy It is very hard to reply to your question without all the info that you really need to post..... When asking a question about speed issues and other problems it helps a lot to let everyone know what kind of hardware you are running....Info such as processor speed,,,amount of ram,,,Type of Graphics adapter and such as well as what programs are running when you are also typing and sending e-mail...If your particular pc uses borderline ram amounts than having other programs running at the same time will greatly slow things down....Try doing just e-mail or just playing solitaire or something like that first and try and give us more of a background so people will jump in with suggestions or answers......Insufficient information makes one want to skip a post with out replying because at that point you are just guessing.......Just my 3 cents...... "Cathy"
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| Lambik | |||
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Group: Members Posts: 62 Member No.: 939 Joined: 21-February 08 |
"Cathy"
As another person replied to you... need more info. Here are some of the major things to look at... RAM? If you have 512MB's RAM, then, yes, Vista will be slow. 1GB is generally accepted as the true minimal size. (Yes, it seems unfair that systems are sold with 512MB's RAM when that's obviously underpowered for Vista. If you don't like the system's speed and don't want to invest in the time and effort to upgrade RAM, then return the system.) Video RAM? If your computer uses shared video RAM, then that 512MB's of system RAM isn't 512MB's of RAM anymore... it's 512 minus whatever is being allocated for video RAM. Brand new computer? File indexing will run for a few days, probably, and that hogs resources. When the indexing finishes its initial job, then things usually perk up. Lang |
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| Serve | |||
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Group: Members Posts: 345 Member No.: 36 Joined: 10-February 08 |
If it's a new PC from a major manufacturer, chances are you have a bunch of junkware. Most of it can be uninstalled from the Control Panel, but occasionally you run into something you can't get rid of. Download "Autoruns.zip" from microsoft.com - it shows you exactly what is starting up with your PC and lets you turn it off. You can also get some performance gains from using TweakVI (google for it). You can also get some of your system back by uninstalling the antivirus and picking a better one... Dana Cline - MCE MVP "Cathy"
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| Stgma | |||
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Group: Members Posts: 17 Member No.: 993 Joined: 25-August 07 |
Presume you're running Vista. Had the same problem on a high end Dell workstatiion with vast computing capacity. If you're waiting endlessly while the "busy" circle gyrates, bring up the performance monitor (type perf mon and hit enter in the run line at the bottom of the start menu) and see if the disk drive is very busy while you wait. Also listen for drive activity and watch the monitor light on the front of your computer. Check out the Vista event monitors. Right click Computer on the Start menu, choose Manage, click Event Viewer, click Custom Views, click Administrative Events, to check for errors that may be happening. If that's the problem, your manufacturer should help. Peter "Cathy" wrote:
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