Re: CPU useage
- From: "Gerry" <gerry@xxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 19 Nov 2007 17:18:34 -0000
B&C
Thanks for reporting the outcome. Glad you solved the problem.
--
Regards.
Gerry
~~~~
FCA
Stourport, England
Enquire, plan and execute
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
B&C wrote:
Sorry for the long delay in answering... medical issues. Process
explorer showed
me the culprit, and the computer is running back to about normal now.
Thanks again.
"B&C" <usenewsgroups@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:On4KtmLGIHA.3768@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Thank you for the advice. I will check into all the information you
gave me,
and will reply... it will be a few days before I am able to. THANKS
"Gerry" <gerry@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:%23PZHl4IGIHA.3360@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
You should be aware that Windows Live Onecare does not come with a
universal seal of approval. I would want evidence that Incredimail
is a major contributor to your problems before considering
uninstalling. Some points arise from your original post. That your
CPU usage hits
100% is not of itself a problem. It is a problem if it does this
for the wrong or an unexplained reason. You need to identify the
process or application that generates such usage. This is indicated
in Windows Task Manager, which you have already visited. A better
tool for investigating CPU usage is Process Explorer (freeware).
Download Process Explorer.
For further information about Process Explorer see here:
http://www.microsoft.com/technet/sysinternals/SystemInformation/ProcessExplorer.mspx
It would be helpful if you could post the Command Line of the
process generating the excessive CPU usage. In Process Explorer
place cursor on Process and select Properties, Image.
To ascertain which service is causing the problem select the image
producing the high CPU usage, right click, select Properties,
Services. Note there are the full names and some explanation of what
each service does.
You will find further information on Services here:
http://majorgeeks.com/page.php?id=12
To trace the particular Service involved you need to turn off each
service in turn and then restore it noting what effect it has on CPU
usage. However, you need to take care and watch what other Services
are dependent on that service. When you click on the Dependencies
tab allow it a little time to display the information.
Often unexplained CPU usage is the result of spyware that slips
through the defences. Even though you think your system is clean
you should not totally rule this out as a possibility. This Article
is worth a read:
http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/page2.html#Removing_Malware What
Add Ons are you using with Internet Explorer? In Internet
Explorer select Tools, Manage Add Ons, Enable or Disable Add-Ons.
Try disabling all Add Ons and see what impact it has on system
performance. If it makes a significant difference try adding one
back at a time and observe for effect.
Also with regard to Internet Explorer do you have lots of windows /
tabs open at any one time. Try closing windows after use. Same
applies with any application, close after use, unless you intend to
return in the near future.
Do you leave your computer on 24/7? This has a cumulative adverse
impact on system performance.
You may have over many programmes opening on booting your computer!
Review the list and see if you can change some to load on demand.
Many users advocate using msconfig but a better freeware utility is
Autoruns.Use Autoruns to find any unwanted start ups!
http://www.microsoft.com/technet/sysinternals/ProcessesAndThreads/Autoruns.mspx
McAfee and Norton are not popular with many users in these
newsgroups. The reason being that they require a lot of resources
to service their requirements. There are a number of freeware
alternatives that do as good a job without bringing with them all
the baggage that comes with McAfee and Norton software. McAfee may
be part of your problem. When is it scheduled to do a full scan?
Does this time correspond with when the most problems occur?
Please open Disk Defragmenter and click on Analyse. Select View
Report and click on Save As and Save. Now find VolumeC.txt in your
My Documents Folder and post a copy. Preferably as it is now and
not after running Disk Defragmenter.
Next select Start, All Programs, Accessories, System Tools, Disk
CleanUp, More Options, System Restore and remove all but the latest
System Restore points? Restore points can be quite large.
You should use Disk CleanUp regularly to Empty your Recycle Bin and
Remove Temporary Internet Files. This is also advisable after
Outlook Express folders have been compacted. Whenever you remove
large numbers of redundant files you should always run Disk
Defragmenter by selecting Start, All Programs, Accessories, System
Tools, Disk Defragmenter. Another important source of information is
Event Viewer. Have you
looked at Error and Warning Reports since the computer was last
booted? You can access Event Viewer by selecting Start, Control
Panel,
Administrative Tools, and Event Viewer. When researching the meaning
of the error, information regarding Event ID, Source and Description
are important.
HOW TO: View and Manage Event Logs in Event Viewer in Windows XP
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/308427/en-us
Part of the Description of the error will include a link, which you
should double click for further information. You can copy using copy
and paste. Often the link will, however, say there is no further
information.
http://go.microsoft.com/fw.link/events.asp
(Please note the hyperlink above is for illustration purposes only)
A tip for posting copies of Error Reports! Run Event Viewer and
double click on the error you want to copy. In the window, which
appears is a button resembling two pages. Click the button and
close Event Viewer.Now start your message (email) and do a paste
into the body
of the message. Make sure this is the first paste after exiting from
Event Viewer.
--
Hope this helps.
Gerry
~~~~
FCA
Stourport, England
Enquire, plan and execute
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
B&C wrote:
I performed the registry cleaner; cleaned out LOTS of stuff, but it
didn't solve the problem.
How do I startup in Safemode?
" db ´¯`·.. ><)))º>` .. ."
<databaseben.public.newsgroup.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:Oq53TsAGIHA.6068@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
well, i think that
incredimail should be
uninstalled.
however, one way to compare
your system is to see how
well the computer works
in safemode.
in safemode, your pc is
basically running pure
windows.
in normal mode your pc is
running windows and
everything that is non
windows.
so comparing the two
enviroments above
would be helpful in
determining whether
windows is faulty or
if the programs running
are causing windows
problems.
otherwise, there are
many variables that
can cause the problems
you mentioned, including
hardware malfuntions.
one of the variables may
simply be an issue caused
by the registry. however
this is only an example. if
it were the registry, then
this would be of some help:
http://onecare.live.com/site/en-US/article/registry_cleaner_why.htm
--
db ·´¯`·.¸. , . .·´¯`·..><)))º>`·.¸¸.·´¯`·.¸.·´¯`·...¸><)))º>¸.
<)))º>·´¯`·.¸. , . .·´¯`·.. ><)))º>`·.¸¸.·´¯`·.¸.·´¯`·...¸><)))º>
.
"B&C" <usenewsgroups@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:uyPGtQAGIHA.2268@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
I hope I'm at the right place; I'm new at this & hope I'm doing
it right...
here goes...
CPU - What takes up the computer's CPU's? How do I free up some
CPU's? I
have just a little knowledge of computers/lingo, but would
appreciate what
ever advice I could get.
My computer: Feb. 2002; HP 780n; 512MB Ram; Intel Pentium 4
CPU 1.80GHz;
Windows XP Home - Upgraded to XP Professional, version 2002 with
service pack
2. [used space: 73.9 GB, Free Space: 33.1GB] I keep up with
all the program's latest updates. I have a highband cable ISP.
A few months back I have started to have slow loading programs,
and it seem to
be getting worse. Sometimes not so bad, and other times
terrible! Large programs, such as Internet Explorer 7,
IncrediMail,
PrintMaster 17, Yahoo Music Jukebox, etc. have started to hit the
100% of my computer's CPU
useage on program start-up, after load-up the useage drops back
down to around
3 or 4 %. Internet Explorer (web based programs) seem to be the
worst, changing Web pages/sites jumps the CPU useage to 100%
again and it waits/loads
as if I was on a poor dial-up ISP.
The Windows Task Manager shows usually 49 process; Commit Charge
435M to 470M
of 1246M; The Physical Memory (K) runs around: a total of
523,808 and available 100,000 to 150,000; The Kernel Memory (K)
is around 30,000 paged &
20,000 Nonpaged.
I have scanned the computer with up to date: McAfee VirusScan
Plus 2007; Lavasoft Ad-Aware SE Plus; and Microsoft Windows
Defender, and it is clean.
I ran the HP Help and Support Center, Instant Support
Professional Editon (online diagnostic tools): System Health
Scan - with no critical issues; Hardware Diagnostics (Processor,
Memory, IDE hard disk, Modem) - with no problems noted; and
Advanced Diagnostics (Memory, IDE hard disk) - with no
problems noted).
( I also have a: Feb. 2004; HP zd7000 Laptop; 1.00 GB Ram;
Intel Pentium 4
CPU 3.20GHz; Windows XP Media Center Edition, version 2002 with
service pack
2. With about the same exact programs as the HP 780n. [used
space: 56.2 GB,
Free Space: 18.2GB] The CPU usage on it tops around the 75-80%
range when
opening the mentioned programs. This computer still operates real
well, loading programs/web pages quickly. )
.
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