If a once-fast computer has slowed to a crawl, you
can't really blame the hardware. Sure, you may be able to improve speed by
adding RAM, upgrading the CPU, or replacing the hard drive with an SSD. But
none of those solutions--all of which cost money--address the underlying
problem. Your hardware isn't underpowered. It's overloaded.
Cleaning out
Windows will very likely speed up a PC. And no, I'm not suggesting reinstalling
the operating system. There are less drastic fixes.
Look for hog processes
Your
computer may be running a poorly-written process that's hogging a lot of
resources. To find out, right-click the taskbar and select Start Task Manager. Click the Processes tab, then the CPU column header. The top items will be the ones hogging
the CPU.
If
you see an obvious culprit, close the program that's running the process (it's
pretty easy to figure out what it is). If that doesn't work, click the End Process button and confirm that you really want
to kill this process.
Should
that fix the problem, avoid using that program in the future. Or find a
better-written replacement.
Otherwise,
back on the Process tab, click the Memory column header and see if you can find the culprit
there.
Clean out autoloaders
When Windows boots, it automatically
loads additional programs--sometimes a lot of them. One big autoloader--or a
lot of little ones--can slow the PC down.
The trick is to bring up Windows' list of
autoloaders, and by disabling and re-enabling them, and rebooting, figure out
which ones are causing the problem.
In Windows XP, Vista, or 7, click Start (Start>Run in
XP), type msconfig, and press ENTER. Once System Configuration comes up, click the Startup tab. You can disable items by unchecking them.
If you're using Windows
8, right-click the taskbar and select Start Task Manager. If you
see aStartup tab, click it. If you don't, click More details, then Startup. To disable an item, right-click it and select Disable.
Do less multitasking
The more programs you run, the slower
they will all be. Consider changing your working habits to have less programs
up at the same time.
Turn off Aero
Windows
7 and Vista use a technology called Aero to improve the esthetic look of the
screen. It's not necessary, and it slows down the PC a bit.
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