Thu Oct 19, 2006 3:59PM EDT
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Reader Maya writes: I have a Dell Latitude C640, a bit more than a couple years old. I've upgraded to a new machine but still use the C640 sometimes. It's starting to run slow. I'm puzzled because I only use the computer for Internet surfing and email. What can I do to make it run faster?
This is a very common question about a very common problem: My computer is slow, what can I do?
Rest assured that while there are indeed plenty of things you can do to speed up your PC, it may not be entirely the case that the computer is getting "slow" but rather that everything else is getting "fast." You noted that you normally use a newer machine, and many people who express that their computers are slow also have multiple PCs, maybe a newer model at work that is much, much faster. It's possible that your expectations have simply gotten higher over time, and by comparison, your older computer is getting left in the dust. You spend most of the day working on a fast machine, so your perception is that your older computer is getting slower and slower, when in reality it may be just as fast as it ever was. The mind plays a lot of tricks like that. It's something to think about.
Now on to your real question: How to speed up a PC, whether it's slowing down or not. Here's the steps I follow when trying to give a little extra oomph to a PC that needs it.
Those are the easy and free things you can do. If your computer is still slow you need to move on to the bigger guns.
I hope these tips help you. Meanwhile, I of course invite the readers to submit their own performance-boosting advice.
Join in the discussion. Here you'll see the comments in the order they were posted.
Buy a mac. The new ones run both Windows and OS X. Donate your old pc to a nonprofit org. for a tax writeoff. I use an external hard drive with my old mac and keep the games, photos, music files, documents, etc. over there. Keeping just the vital programs and system files in the computer itself lets it run faster. The same will work for a pc.
Good.
Thank you! Just cleaning the disk and running defrag helped alot. I also negotiated which programs I could really do without and deleted them. I will run msconfig because I have 52 items running on start-up. I think you're not supposed to have more than 32 at most. That's slowing me down, I'm sure! Thanks again.
Adding a video card with its own memory, instead of using the video imbedded on the motherboard will also speed up the computer very nicely.
There seems to be a difference of opinion re defrag and defrag with free space consolidation. PerfectDisk says consolidation is the best, Diskeeper says it is a waste of time and computer resources. Which is correct. Note that pre XP windows consolidated free space, and XP defrag cannot. etgawal@sbcglobal.net
That was very helpful,thank you lot!!
catch22..i keep getting this invitation to upgrade my yahoo and when i try to i get this notice that i must upgrade to dsl which i've been trying to do since i've been with sbc about 4 years now at least.now sbc has bought at&t who also keeps inviting me to go highspeed or dsl,which i'd do in a flash only to be informed that they are not available in my area!does anybody have any solutions ???
I'm a long time Mac owner and I'm not whiny (stamps feet petulantly) :-) Macs don't usually need anti virus programs (only because not many viruses have been written for it), and disc defrag is a thing of the past with OSX. Extra RAM is always good. There are system maintenance programs that run in the background or at night or when the machine is not being used that periodically do semi-arcane things to keep a Mac running smoothly. OSX does some of this automatically each evening but you have to leave the computer fully On (not On in sleep mode). I use Macaroni for my automatic maintenence program, $9 at http://atomicbird.com/ but there are freeware programs out there. An occasional disc defrag with Diskwarrior every few months seems to help.
Excellent ariticle and very useful info!
One thing I've found that helps with Internet speed is to delete files and cookies (under the Tools, Internet Options menu in IE6).
i will try it and let you know tomorrow- thanks..
My daughter saves alot of her picture off her camera, and uses those icon picture for her desk top - will that slow down the PC aswell?
THANKS
You forgot Defragmenting!!! Its much easier and quicker than upgrading hardware. Regular defragmenting keeps programs from crashing and files getting corruppted. You defragment your hard drive by going to :Start/control panel or going into your hard drive "properties"
Very helplful and thank you very much for posting this on the Internet,, VERY VERY HELPFUL,Shaun
Most experts today agree that you should not use a registry cleaner.
this helps some, but my sister was going on all those game sites, and all kinds of spyware got onto the computer, and i used it the day that it started to get really bad, but now my father has about 5 virus & spyware programs on this computer, and none of them have helped! i tried to get him to just start over, but being the person that he is, he doesnt know where the cds to do this are. So my question to you is what can be the problem? because im tired of getting blamed for this junk.
As another non-whiny mac user who is actually in charge of running a corporate network of all Macs, the biggest thing I can suggest is let the programs run that you don't even know are there, and if you do start having trouble run Disk Utility and "Repair permissions" that will fix any issues that do creep up from the very occasional crashes. Also, there are *NO* virus's written for the Mac. There have been some "Proof of concept" virus's written but nothing out in the wild and nothing ever will be written to the scale as the 144,000+ (Last time I checked) virus's that Windows is exposed to. All in all... Buy a Mac, and surf without worry of spyware, adware, malware, or virus's... Never had a single one in my years of experience.
As another non-whiny mac user who is actually in charge of running a corporate network of all Macs, the biggest thing I can suggest is let the programs run that you don't even know are there, and if you do start having trouble run Disk Utility and "Repair permissions" that will fix any issues that do creep up from the very occasional crashes. Also, there are *NO* virus's written for the Mac. There have been some "Proof of concept" virus's written but nothing out in the wild and nothing ever will be written to the scale as the 144,000+ (Last time I checked) virus's that Windows is exposed to. All in all... Buy a Mac, and surf without worry of spyware, adware, malware, or virus's... Never had a single one in my years of experience.
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46 Posted by qtrlberwxch on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:24PM EDT Report Abuse
How do you format window XP?