My computer is so slow at times and sometimes I cannot get on line. What is the best way to fix this? My computer is 9 years old and some people say I need to replace it. Others say I need to purchase something. Help again please.
Delete your temporary folders and cookies....do a defragment....get rid of all those icons on your desktop..they slow your PC down and you dont need them..you can still use your programme button.
You could also do a disc clean to get rid of old files etc.
This may all help but if it doesnt.....a new PC may be required or maybe you might be able to get hold of some more memory.
I delete my cookies etc everytime I use the PC..just before I log off.I also defragment every week,normally on a Sunday morning.
I use ccleaner and the best thing is its free http://www.piriform.com/
Agree, CCleaner is good.
However you will need a RAM (memory) upgrade if it is 9 years old and has never been upgraded. To check how much you have, right click on My Computer and go to Properties. You can get replacement RAM on Ebay and its a simple job, but there are different types and some older RAM is very expensive so may not be worth the expense.
To avoid having to take the back off the PC at this stage, I would download this free program http://download.cnet.com/SiSoftware-Sandra/3000-2086_4-10556571.html?tag=mncol which will inspect your PC hardware and tell you what type of RAM and motherboard (main board which all the other bits slot into) you have, and how many slots are free.
A computer that's nine years old? I'd say it needs a little bit of work and an upgrade to get it going at full speed again.
CCleaner is ok but it's not a miracle worker, LOL
A nine yr old PC is always going to be slow I'm afraid.
As others have said - more memory may help. Defragging may help a bit if your drive is fragmented. A reg cleaner like CCleaner can help as well as clearing out old unused progs esp those that grab memory at start up. Lots of progs do that!
Deleting cookies wont help that much (unless it is related to certain websites) and deleting desktop items wont help at all im afraid.
I generally reinstall XP every few years (for my work PCs) and if you can do this as well as adding memory then it is quite amazing how much quicker things can be on a clean box. However it means backing up all your data and then reinstalling all your progs. Depends on your techyness whether you want to go down that route.
Personally I would buy a new box - there are some very cheap deals to be had if you look hard enough..
Thanks for replies. I am considering all options. I don't mind my computer being a bit slow but not 15-20 mins to get on a site. Thanks again.
PS It is not slow all the time. Tonight it quite quick.
one of my pcs has a 9 year old motherboard . It works quite fine, but it is a lean machine.
if loading web pages gets slower and slower the longer you have been on the net, try restarting the pc
see how fast your connection is -
with something like http://www.broadbandspeedchecker.co.uk/ (http://www.broadbandspeedchecker.co.uk/) if you have broadband
Join your local freecycle and put in a request for a replacement base unit, you will be surprised what people will give away.
http://www.freecycle.org (http://www.freecycle.org)
Or you may be able to pick a newer one than you have for a few pounds on ebay.
Thanks for the above replies.
I am reluctant to buy a new computer because of transferring the sites etc. from my present one.
Sometimes at certain times of the day I cannot even get on line, but will try the above.
Take out the hard drive, get one with the same interface but bigger, install Linux, I recommend Mandriva, but other distros exist, Ubuntu is popular and easy to use. This is being typed on a ten uear old laptop and they only reason I spent 75 quid a few weeks ago on a s/h 4 year old ex-corporate workstation was cos this one doesn't have the grunt to play iplayer after their last upgrade.
This is a 900MHz Pentium 3 with 512Mb memory and a 32Mb graphics card built in (but ptoper graphics memory, not shared.....
One obnoxious resource murderer on Windows is anti-virus and similar software. Unneeded on linux as there are no viruses and no executable can install without your knowledge
I am reluctant to buy a new computer because of transferring the sites etc. from my present one
By this do you mean transferring your list of saved websites? It is very easy to do this, and its a good idea to back up everything in case your PC packs up, which it is quite likely to do given its age!
Have to agree with chriscross.
I use Ubuntu on an old laptop and it was like going back in time.
Its really user friendly and FREE.
Its fine for browsing etc.
I use Ubuntu too on an old pc of mine. I recommend it. You can run it off a cd to try it, obviously slower, but it gives you an idea without having to commit yourself!
Thanks. Sound a good idea.
Linux Mint is another one, I've used it on old laptops and it works a treat, far faster than any version of Windows would be on the same machine.
Quote from: chriscross1966 on December 19, 2010, 08:43:15
One obnoxious resource murderer on Windows is anti-virus and similar software.
This is simply not true - I realise that Linux users are always on a campaign to get others on board but this is utter nonsense and has been for years.
Linux is great - why not promote it (if you must) for the benefits it has - not for the imagined drawbacks of alternatives..
AVG - currently 0% of CPU and 1.7 mb of mem.
My Steam client - when doing nothing takes 70 mb..
I run over 800 windows PCs usong Sophos and they run with no noticable diference whether Sophos is running or not and we have some old PCs in that number...
I use advanced system care (microsoft free download) to do the cleaning up jobs as above -you can get it from thier website for free. just another option helps with a little spyware and security stuff to.
X sunloving
I have an Apple laptop also 9 or 10 years old. For Christmas I am having a netbook. How do I transfer old bookmarks please. I am useless with computers but am hoping to be able post pictures, links etc. If I don't reappear you will know that OH has lost his patience with me & I am under the patio ;) ;D.
Thanks again for replies. Most of it is over my head but I am working on suggestions.
No fighting please.
The very first thing I run on any computer I need to work on is Malwarebytes. Get the free version (it does everything the paid version does except run continually).
http://www.malwarebytes.org/
Install it, scan, Just delete everything it finds.
(My record so far is over 750 malware/junk items found on an elderly relatives computer who had let his grand children use it to play on. That computer was taking 10 minutes to boot up and 5 mins to load a web pages.)
Also, use a program like Autoruns (also free)
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/sysinternals/bb963902.aspx
Its a tiny program, run it, and under the 'logon' tab, theres a list of the programs that try to run when you boot up. Chances are its pretty full. At very most you might actually need 4 or 5 things. The important ones to have running are your firewall and antivirus - uncheck the rest and reboot.