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I have a 6 year old Dell Dimensions XP computer that in recent months has been running very badly.
It has had 3 PC Restores by Dell in 2 years and is now out of warranty.
When I first use it in the day Outlook Express is very sluggish, when you click on an email it could take 20/30 seconds to appear.Recently when I am online and want to send an email it won't do it and you have to restart the computer to send emails.Emails take longer to download than a year ago.
When I log off up to 3 "End Program" windows can appear and generally the computer is acting bad.
Is it old age? This thing should work fine for 10 years!
I do all the maintenance, defrag, cleaner, removing cookies and use the McAfee Clean Up tool.I have no bad software installed as far as I know.
Is there anything I can do save another PC Restore?
Thanks!
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Servalan123 wrote:
[Quoted Text] > I have a 6 year old Dell Dimensions XP computer that in recent > months has been running very badly. > > It has had 3 PC Restores by Dell in 2 years and is now out of > warranty. > > When I first use it in the day Outlook Express is very sluggish, > when you click on an email it could take 20/30 seconds to > appear.Recently when I am online and want to send an email it won't > do it and you have to restart the computer to send emails.Emails > take longer to download than a year ago. > > When I log off up to 3 "End Program" windows can appear and > generally the computer is acting bad. > > Is it old age? This thing should work fine for 10 years! > > I do all the maintenance, defrag, cleaner, removing cookies and use > the McAfee Clean Up tool.I have no bad software installed as far as > I know. > > Is there anything I can do save another PC Restore?
A computer - no upgrades, basic consumer/home user - I would personally say has a lifespan of between four and seven years. Shorter if the consumer needs change and/or new peripherals are purchased and expected to function on the computer.
Let us know what processor you have, how much memory and how free drive space?
-- Shenan Stanley MS-MVP -- How To Ask Questions The Smart Way http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html
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On Fri, 12 Dec 2008 15:55:01 -0800, Servalan123 <Servalan123[ at ]discussions.microsoft.com> wrote:
[Quoted Text] > I have a 6 year old Dell Dimensions XP computer that in recent months has > been running very badly. > > It has had 3 PC Restores by Dell in 2 years and is now out of warranty. > > When I first use it in the day Outlook Express is very sluggish, when you > click on an email it could take 20/30 seconds to appear.Recently when I am > online and want to send an email it won't do it and you have to restart the > computer to send emails.Emails take longer to download than a year ago. > > When I log off up to 3 "End Program" windows can appear and generally the > computer is acting bad. > > Is it old age? This thing should work fine for 10 years!
No, it's not old age. The age is irrelevant.
> I do all the maintenance, defrag, cleaner, removing cookies and use the > McAfee Clean Up tool.I have no bad software installed as far as I know.
I can't tell for sure based on what you've said, but my *guess* is that you are infected with malware. McAfee is the second worst anti-virus program available (only Norton is worse) and you said nothing about anti-spyware programs.
> Is there anything I can do save another PC Restore?
"Another PC Restore" is almost invariably the worst thing you might do. If you properly take care of the computer, it should never be necessary.
-- Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience Please Reply to the Newsgroup
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My 6.5 year old Dell desktop runs as fast as the day I got it.
Malicious software ("malware") could be installed on your computer.
Make sure that your anti-malware software is running, then download the latest signatures and run a full scan.
If you don't have comprehensive anti-malware software, that's like driving a car without seats belts or air bags. 'Comprehensive' anti-malware software scans for all types of malicious software in the background, on demand and on schedule
For now try scanning your system with /several/ of the better online scanners, such as: Kaspersky Antivirus (http://www.kaspersky.com/virusscanner) Panda ActiveScan (http://www.pandasoftware.com/activescan)
Download HijackThis from www.trendsecure.com. Run it, save a log, and post the log at one of the many sites that support HJT, such as spywarewarrior.com, bleepingcomputer.com, and http://aumha.net -- but not here. Within a day you'll have step-by-step advice from an expert on cleaning up any malware infestations.
Even the best detection and removal software can't fix every malware infection. If none of the above remove the infection, you may want to show the computer to a professional. You might need to erase your hard drive and start over.
--- Leonard Grey Errare humanum est
Servalan123 wrote:
[Quoted Text] > I have a 6 year old Dell Dimensions XP computer that in recent months has > been running very badly. > > It has had 3 PC Restores by Dell in 2 years and is now out of warranty. > > When I first use it in the day Outlook Express is very sluggish, when you > click on an email it could take 20/30 seconds to appear.Recently when I am > online and want to send an email it won't do it and you have to restart the > computer to send emails.Emails take longer to download than a year ago. > > When I log off up to 3 "End Program" windows can appear and generally the > computer is acting bad. > > Is it old age? This thing should work fine for 10 years! > > I do all the maintenance, defrag, cleaner, removing cookies and use the > McAfee Clean Up tool.I have no bad software installed as far as I know. > > Is there anything I can do save another PC Restore? > > Thanks!
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"Servalan123" <Servalan123[ at ]discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:30E0173B-5071-40FE-907C-4D5208DABF37[ at ]microsoft.com...
[Quoted Text] >I have a 6 year old Dell Dimensions XP computer that in recent months >has > been running very badly. > > It has had 3 PC Restores by Dell in 2 years and is now out of > warranty. > > When I first use it in the day Outlook Express is very sluggish, when > you > click on an email it could take 20/30 seconds to appear.Recently when > I am > online and want to send an email it won't do it and you have to > restart the > computer to send emails.Emails take longer to download than a year > ago. > > When I log off up to 3 "End Program" windows can appear and generally > the > computer is acting bad. > > Is it old age? This thing should work fine for 10 years! > > I do all the maintenance, defrag, cleaner, removing cookies and use > the > McAfee Clean Up tool.I have no bad software installed as far as I > know. > > Is there anything I can do save another PC Restore?
You didn't mention performing the usual Outlook Express maintenance measures, including compacting your OE folders. See:
http://www.insideoe.com/files/maintain.htm
Before you compact your folders, make sure you create new folders (for e-mails you choose to save) so that your Inbox and Sent Items folders are not overstuffed. It's important, too, that these new folders are not subfolders (at least, they should not be subfolders under the Inbox or Sent Items folders).
Here is a rundown of the usual causes of sluggishness:
1. Malicious software (malware)
2. Certain programs that are designed to combat malware (e.g., Norton and McAfee). Ironically, they can slow things down because they simply use way too many resources. Sometime they cause conflicts with other programs. And their default mode is to scan your entire hard drive each time you boot up.
3. Too many of *certain types* of programs always running in the background -- with or without your knowledge.
Use these sites to determine what these programs are and to learn how to configure them not to always run at startup:
http://www.pacs-portal.co.uk/startup_content.php#THE_PROGRAMS http://www.bleepingcomputer.com/startups/ http://www.answersthatwork.com/Tasklist_pages/tasklist.htm
Sometimes it is recommended to use msconfig to configure the programs to not run at startup. A better, more thorough program is Autoruns:
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/sysinternals/bb963902.aspx
4. Not enough RAM, which causes the PC to overly rely on the pagefile. A quick way to determine if this is happening is to open Task Manager (Ctrl+Alt+Del) and click the Performance tab. Then note the three values under Commit Charge (K): in the lower left-hand corner: Total, Limit, and Peak.
The Total figure represents the amount of memory you are using at that very moment. The Peak figure represents the highest amount of memory you used since last bootup. If both these figures are below the value of Physical Memory (K) Total, then you probably have plenty of RAM. Otherwise, you may want to explore this further by running Page File Monitor for Windows XP:
http://www.dougknox.com/xp/utils/xp_pagefilemon.htm
5. You might also want to check that your hard drive's access mode didn't change from DMA to PIO:
http://www.technize.com/2007/08/02/is-your-hard-disk-cddvd-drives-too-slow-while-copying/
and
http://users.bigpond.net.au/ninjaduck/itserviceduck/udma_fix/
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Servalan123
In Outlook Express place the cursor on Local Folders and select File, Work Offline followed by File, Folder, Compact All. Do not attempt to interupt or stop the process until it has completed. Close Outlook Express when it has completed.
After compacting check your Outlook Express folders are as they should be. Then select Start, All Programs, Accessories, System Tools, Disk CleanUp to Empty your Recycle Bin and Remove Temporary Internet Files. Also select Start, All Programs, accessories, System Tools, Disk CleanUp, More Options, System Restore and remove all but the latest System Restore point. Run Disk Defragmenter.
--
Hope this helps.
Gerry ~~~~ FCA Stourport, England Enquire, plan and execute ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Servalan123 wrote:
[Quoted Text] > I have a 6 year old Dell Dimensions XP computer that in recent months > has been running very badly. > > It has had 3 PC Restores by Dell in 2 years and is now out of > warranty. > > When I first use it in the day Outlook Express is very sluggish, when > you click on an email it could take 20/30 seconds to appear.Recently > when I am online and want to send an email it won't do it and you > have to restart the computer to send emails.Emails take longer to > download than a year ago. > > When I log off up to 3 "End Program" windows can appear and generally > the computer is acting bad. > > Is it old age? This thing should work fine for 10 years! > > I do all the maintenance, defrag, cleaner, removing cookies and use > the McAfee Clean Up tool.I have no bad software installed as far as I > know. > > Is there anything I can do save another PC Restore? > > Thanks!
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"Ken Blake, MVP" wrote:
[Quoted Text] > On Fri, 12 Dec 2008 15:55:01 -0800, Servalan123 > <Servalan123[ at ]discussions.microsoft.com> wrote: > > > I have a 6 year old Dell Dimensions XP computer that in recent months has > > been running very badly. > > > > It has had 3 PC Restores by Dell in 2 years and is now out of warranty. > > > > When I first use it in the day Outlook Express is very sluggish, when you > > click on an email it could take 20/30 seconds to appear.Recently when I am > > online and want to send an email it won't do it and you have to restart the > > computer to send emails.Emails take longer to download than a year ago. > > > > When I log off up to 3 "End Program" windows can appear and generally the > > computer is acting bad. > > > > Is it old age? This thing should work fine for 10 years! > > > No, it's not old age. The age is irrelevant. > > > > I do all the maintenance, defrag, cleaner, removing cookies and use the > > McAfee Clean Up tool.I have no bad software installed as far as I know. > > > I can't tell for sure based on what you've said, but my *guess* is > that you are infected with malware. McAfee is the second worst > anti-virus program available (only Norton is worse) and you said > nothing about anti-spyware programs. > > > > Is there anything I can do save another PC Restore? > > > "Another PC Restore" is almost invariably the worst thing you might > do. If you properly take care of the computer, it should never be > necessary. > > -- > Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience > Please Reply to the Newsgroup >
Thanks for all your helpful replies.
The computer is a Dell Dimensions 3000, Celeron 2.66 GHz, RAM 512MB and 80 GB Hard Disk (67% free). I have Mc Afee Anti Virus 2008 Full Edition, Spybot (updated), Spyguard and Winpatrol (latest edition). I just downloaded MalwareBytes Anti Malware from MajorGeeks.com and nothing has come up on any program.
If a computer only lasts 4 years (crazy!) then this thing is suffering from old age.
I will go through the procedures you all mention and hopefully at least one will help.
Thanks again!
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On Sat, 13 Dec 2008 16:01:02 -0800, Servalan123 <Servalan123[ at ]discussions.microsoft.com> wrote:
[Quoted Text] > "Ken Blake, MVP" wrote: > > > On Fri, 12 Dec 2008 15:55:01 -0800, Servalan123 > > <Servalan123[ at ]discussions.microsoft.com> wrote: > > > > > I have a 6 year old Dell Dimensions XP computer that in recent months has > > > been running very badly. > > > > > > It has had 3 PC Restores by Dell in 2 years and is now out of warranty. > > > > > > When I first use it in the day Outlook Express is very sluggish, when you > > > click on an email it could take 20/30 seconds to appear.Recently when I am > > > online and want to send an email it won't do it and you have to restart the > > > computer to send emails.Emails take longer to download than a year ago. > > > > > > When I log off up to 3 "End Program" windows can appear and generally the > > > computer is acting bad. > > > > > > Is it old age? This thing should work fine for 10 years! > > > > > > No, it's not old age. The age is irrelevant. > > > > > > > I do all the maintenance, defrag, cleaner, removing cookies and use the > > > McAfee Clean Up tool.I have no bad software installed as far as I know. > > > > > > I can't tell for sure based on what you've said, but my *guess* is > > that you are infected with malware. McAfee is the second worst > > anti-virus program available (only Norton is worse) and you said > > nothing about anti-spyware programs. > > > > > > > Is there anything I can do save another PC Restore? > > > > > > "Another PC Restore" is almost invariably the worst thing you might > > do. If you properly take care of the computer, it should never be > > necessary. > > > > -- > > Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience > > Please Reply to the Newsgroup > > > Thanks for all your helpful replies.
You're welcome. Glad to help.
> The computer is a Dell Dimensions 3000, Celeron 2.66 GHz, RAM 512MB and 80 > GB Hard Disk (67% free). > I have Mc Afee Anti Virus 2008 Full Edition, Spybot (updated), Spyguard and > Winpatrol (latest edition). > I just downloaded MalwareBytes Anti Malware from MajorGeeks.com and nothing > has come up on any program.
Then you probably have reasonable protection against malware and my guess that malware is your problem is likely wrong.
> If a computer only lasts 4 years (crazy!) then this thing is suffering from > old age.
The thought that "a computer only lasts 4 years" is completely false. Mine, for example, is something around six or seven years old, and has no problems at all.
Age is never an issue.
> I will go through the procedures you all mention and hopefully at least one > will help. > > Thanks again!
-- Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience Please Reply to the Newsgroup
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Ken Blake, MVP wrote:
[Quoted Text] >> If a computer only lasts 4 years (crazy!) then this thing is >> suffering from old age. > > The thought that "a computer only lasts 4 years" is completely > false. Mine, for example, is something around six or seven years > old, and has no problems at all. > > Age is never an issue.
It's not the age of the computer necessarily - but the needs of the user and applications thus used that usually change over time.
Bought a system with 128MB memory and 30GB of hard drive space when Windows XP was first released and used Office 2000... Now you have Office 2007 and Windows XP with SP3 along with the half-dozen or so plugins that have also grown in size and resource needs over time. It *does* run slower than it would with just Windows XP RTM and none of those things (or even older versions.)
You might be fine with nothing more than a memory upgrade in that case. But let's say you got that new digital camcorder and want to edit video - unless you are very patient - likely not even memory will keep that computer running at what one would consider a reasonable rate. ;-)
-- Shenan Stanley MS-MVP -- How To Ask Questions The Smart Way http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html
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On Sat, 13 Dec 2008 20:37:54 -0600, "Shenan Stanley" <newshelper[ at ]gmail.com> wrote:
[Quoted Text] > Ken Blake, MVP wrote: > >> If a computer only lasts 4 years (crazy!) then this thing is > >> suffering from old age. > > > > The thought that "a computer only lasts 4 years" is completely > > false. Mine, for example, is something around six or seven years > > old, and has no problems at all. > > > > Age is never an issue. > > It's not the age of the computer necessarily - but the needs of the user and > applications thus used that usually change over time.
Sure.
Isn't that what I said? The age of the computer is never an issue. Changes like those certainly affect performance. The age of the computer doesn't.
> Bought a system with 128MB memory and 30GB of hard drive space when Windows > XP was first released and used Office 2000... Now you have Office 2007 and > Windows XP with SP3 along with the half-dozen or so plugins that have also > grown in size and resource needs over time. It *does* run slower than it > would with just Windows XP RTM and none of those things (or even older > versions.) > > You might be fine with nothing more than a memory upgrade in that case. But > let's say you got that new digital camcorder and want to edit video - unless > you are very patient - likely not even memory will keep that computer > running at what one would consider a reasonable rate. ;-) > > -- > Shenan Stanley > MS-MVP > -- > How To Ask Questions The Smart Way > http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html >
-- Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience Please Reply to the Newsgroup
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The usual problem here is oversize mailboxes.
OE has a limit on mailbox (.dbx file) size. Typically it will work OK with files up to 250MB, and then progressively gets more erratic, till at around 500MB it starts bugging-out.
The answer is to make new folders and move some of the mail over. THEN you need to compact all folders.
Servalan123 wrote:
[Quoted Text] > I have a 6 year old Dell Dimensions XP computer that in recent months > has been running very badly. > > It has had 3 PC Restores by Dell in 2 years and is now out of > warranty. > > When I first use it in the day Outlook Express is very sluggish, when > you click on an email it could take 20/30 seconds to appear.Recently > when I am online and want to send an email it won't do it and you > have to restart the computer to send emails.Emails take longer to > download than a year ago.
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Anteaus
The ability to handle large dbx files depends on the capacity of the computer in terms of CPU and memory. Your figures are far too high for most home computers.
--
Gerry ~~~~ FCA Stourport, England Enquire, plan and execute ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Anteaus wrote:
[Quoted Text] > The usual problem here is oversize mailboxes. > > OE has a limit on mailbox (.dbx file) size. Typically it will work OK > with files up to 250MB, and then progressively gets more erratic, > till at around 500MB it starts bugging-out. > > The answer is to make new folders and move some of the mail over. > THEN you need to compact all folders. > > Servalan123 wrote: >> I have a 6 year old Dell Dimensions XP computer that in recent months >> has been running very badly. >> >> It has had 3 PC Restores by Dell in 2 years and is now out of >> warranty. >> >> When I first use it in the day Outlook Express is very sluggish, when >> you click on an email it could take 20/30 seconds to appear.Recently >> when I am online and want to send an email it won't do it and you >> have to restart the computer to send emails.Emails take longer to >> download than a year ago.
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May also want to check on the compatibility of McAfee with the other anti-malware sw you have on your machine. They have a huge list of sw that their suite clashes with, and that can severely impact performance.
"Servalan123" wrote:
[Quoted Text] > > > "Ken Blake, MVP" wrote: > > > On Fri, 12 Dec 2008 15:55:01 -0800, Servalan123 > > <Servalan123[ at ]discussions.microsoft.com> wrote: > > > > > I have a 6 year old Dell Dimensions XP computer that in recent months has > > > been running very badly. > > > > > > It has had 3 PC Restores by Dell in 2 years and is now out of warranty. > > > > > > When I first use it in the day Outlook Express is very sluggish, when you > > > click on an email it could take 20/30 seconds to appear.Recently when I am > > > online and want to send an email it won't do it and you have to restart the > > > computer to send emails.Emails take longer to download than a year ago. > > > > > > When I log off up to 3 "End Program" windows can appear and generally the > > > computer is acting bad. > > > > > > Is it old age? This thing should work fine for 10 years! > > > > > > No, it's not old age. The age is irrelevant. > > > > > > > I do all the maintenance, defrag, cleaner, removing cookies and use the > > > McAfee Clean Up tool.I have no bad software installed as far as I know. > > > > > > I can't tell for sure based on what you've said, but my *guess* is > > that you are infected with malware. McAfee is the second worst > > anti-virus program available (only Norton is worse) and you said > > nothing about anti-spyware programs. > > > > > > > Is there anything I can do save another PC Restore? > > > > > > "Another PC Restore" is almost invariably the worst thing you might > > do. If you properly take care of the computer, it should never be > > necessary. > > > > -- > > Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience > > Please Reply to the Newsgroup > > > Thanks for all your helpful replies. > > The computer is a Dell Dimensions 3000, Celeron 2.66 GHz, RAM 512MB and 80 > GB Hard Disk (67% free). > I have Mc Afee Anti Virus 2008 Full Edition, Spybot (updated), Spyguard and > Winpatrol (latest edition). > I just downloaded MalwareBytes Anti Malware from MajorGeeks.com and nothing > has come up on any program. > > If a computer only lasts 4 years (crazy!) then this thing is suffering from > old age. > > I will go through the procedures you all mention and hopefully at least one > will help. > > Thanks again!
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