Re: very slow computer
- From: "Unknown" <unknown@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 1 Jun 2009 10:53:54 -0500
So many times you ask questions that are clearly answerable in the original
post.
Tis obvious you just jump in and make an idiot of yourself so many times.
"Gerry" <gerry@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:uK%23RoGX4JHA.1528@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Quite Ron. I was asking about the Commit Charge. Unknown is one of those
contributors who offer little and love to pick up on irrelevant points in
other peoples posts.
Now I can just as easily pick up points in posts by others including yours
but it generally does not help resolve anything so I try to refrain from
doing it!
--
Gerry
~~~~
FCA
Stourport, England
Enquire, plan and execute
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Ron Badour wrote:
The reason you were asked the question is because of the first para
of her post:
My computer is about 7 years old. Running windows xp home. Service
pack 3. It is a pentium 4 cpu 1.80 GHz and 256 MB of ram.
"Gerry" <gerry@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:Oq1JOEW4JHA.5276@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
It's obvious you didn't!
--
Gerry
~~~~
FCA
Stourport, England
Enquire, plan and execute
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Unknown wrote:
Did you read her post??????
"Gerry" <gerry@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:eL98P1V4JHA.1196@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Linda
What is the CPU and how much RAM does the computer have? Right
click on the My Computer icon on ther Desktop and select
Properties to get this information.
Try Ctrl+Alt+Delete to select Task Manager and click the
Performance Tab. Under Commit Charge what is the Total, the Limit
and the Peak? You may help system performance by changing programmes
from
starting during the boot process to loading on demand. Minimising
multi-tasking will help. Putting shortcuts like Show Desktop,
Internet Explorer, Outlook Express and Windows Explorer in the
Quick Launch Tray may help to encourage you to close these
applications after use as it is easy to reopen them when required.
Minimising the use of Add-Ons with Internet Explorer will help.
Avoid seciuity software which generates excessive demands for
memory. McAfee and Norton products are notably among those to be
avoided. Avoid using facilities which run in the background when they
can be
run when the computer is not being used. An example is Diskeeper
which can continuously defragment when it can be set to run on
demand. --
Hope this helps.
Gerry
~~~~
FCA
Stourport, England
Enquire, plan and execute
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Linda in Iowa wrote:
My computer is about 7 years old. Running windows xp home.
Service pack 3. It is a pentium 4 cpu 1.80 GHz and 256 MB of ram.
It has gotten so slow that I wait for it to print or wonder if I
really clicked a button at times. I also get a lot of virtual
memory messages. It has a 40 gig hard drive with 16 gig of free
space. My cable internet connection is like a dial up these days.
I have thought about cleaning the hard drive as in formatting and
reinstalling windows and programs I need, but then all those
updates need to be redone. Is there an easy way to clean up the hard
drive so i can remove all those little unknown things that
mysteriously get there? Not ready to buy a new computer as I
don't want Vista and also don't
want to spend the money as this computer is more than adequate for
what I need. Thanks.
.
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