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Is it time to buy a new computer?



 
 
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  #11  
Old September 8th 05, 09:02 PM
chris
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Hello Mary:

Without knowing what type of applications you're running on your system, it
would be kind of hard to say if you require a new system or not.

One thing I do recommend before buying a new system, is to buy a new 40 or
80 GB HDD. Mirror or reinstall Windows to the new drive...if you're still
not happy with the performance, you're best to buy a new system ....

Chris.

--
"All problems have a simple solution! The more complex the solution, the
more ludicrous the analogy!"
"Mary" wrote in message
oups.com...
I have a Dell Dimension XPS T450MHz computer with a Pentium III (512K
Cache, whatever that means) I added RAM for a total of 224MB. The hard
drive is 13GB with only 2.97 GB used. OS is Windows 98SE My computer
is very slow: takes forever to boot up, takes forever to launch apps,
sometimes mouse is slow and jerky, sometimes hard drive runs alot. I
defrag and run scandisk regularly/empty recycle bin/delete temp file.
I've used regclean; deleted stuff from startup; played with virtual
memory; scanned for viruses/adware/spyware (have McAfee); changed to
network server setting, etc. Tried all the tweaks that I dare relating
to Win 98. I've physically cleaned out all the dust in the CPU and
tried to blow out all the dust around the exhaust fan. All to no
avail. Is it time to buy a new computer? Is the thing just wearing
out? It has been hot & humid here - any connection?

Thanks for any advice.



  #12  
Old September 8th 05, 11:17 PM
Gary S. Terhune
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Why? She has plenty of HD free space already (10+ GB). A bigger drive will
not affect performance (except in a negative manner) unless it has
insufficient free space. Not the case here.

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS-MVP Shell/User

"chris" wrote in message
...
Hello Mary:

Without knowing what type of applications you're running on your system,
it
would be kind of hard to say if you require a new system or not.

One thing I do recommend before buying a new system, is to buy a new 40 or
80 GB HDD. Mirror or reinstall Windows to the new drive...if you're still
not happy with the performance, you're best to buy a new system ....

Chris.

--
"All problems have a simple solution! The more complex the solution, the
more ludicrous the analogy!"
"Mary" wrote in message
oups.com...
I have a Dell Dimension XPS T450MHz computer with a Pentium III (512K
Cache, whatever that means) I added RAM for a total of 224MB. The hard
drive is 13GB with only 2.97 GB used. OS is Windows 98SE My computer
is very slow: takes forever to boot up, takes forever to launch apps,
sometimes mouse is slow and jerky, sometimes hard drive runs alot. I
defrag and run scandisk regularly/empty recycle bin/delete temp file.
I've used regclean; deleted stuff from startup; played with virtual
memory; scanned for viruses/adware/spyware (have McAfee); changed to
network server setting, etc. Tried all the tweaks that I dare relating
to Win 98. I've physically cleaned out all the dust in the CPU and
tried to blow out all the dust around the exhaust fan. All to no
avail. Is it time to buy a new computer? Is the thing just wearing
out? It has been hot & humid here - any connection?

Thanks for any advice.





  #13  
Old September 8th 05, 11:17 PM posted to microsoft.public.win98.performance
Gary S. Terhune
External Usenet User
 
Posts: 1,846
Default Is it time to buy a new computer?

Why? She has plenty of HD free space already (10+ GB). A bigger drive will
not affect performance (except in a negative manner) unless it has
insufficient free space. Not the case here.

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS-MVP Shell/User

"chris" wrote in message
...
Hello Mary:

Without knowing what type of applications you're running on your system,
it
would be kind of hard to say if you require a new system or not.

One thing I do recommend before buying a new system, is to buy a new 40 or
80 GB HDD. Mirror or reinstall Windows to the new drive...if you're still
not happy with the performance, you're best to buy a new system ....

Chris.

--
"All problems have a simple solution! The more complex the solution, the
more ludicrous the analogy!"
"Mary" wrote in message
oups.com...
I have a Dell Dimension XPS T450MHz computer with a Pentium III (512K
Cache, whatever that means) I added RAM for a total of 224MB. The hard
drive is 13GB with only 2.97 GB used. OS is Windows 98SE My computer
is very slow: takes forever to boot up, takes forever to launch apps,
sometimes mouse is slow and jerky, sometimes hard drive runs alot. I
defrag and run scandisk regularly/empty recycle bin/delete temp file.
I've used regclean; deleted stuff from startup; played with virtual
memory; scanned for viruses/adware/spyware (have McAfee); changed to
network server setting, etc. Tried all the tweaks that I dare relating
to Win 98. I've physically cleaned out all the dust in the CPU and
tried to blow out all the dust around the exhaust fan. All to no
avail. Is it time to buy a new computer? Is the thing just wearing
out? It has been hot & humid here - any connection?

Thanks for any advice.





  #14  
Old September 9th 05, 12:22 AM
chris
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Does becoming MS-MVP require the knowledge of computer hardware? With a
statement like that, I seriously doubt it!
--
"All problems have a simple solution! The more complex the solution, the
more ludicrous the analogy!"
"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
Why? She has plenty of HD free space already (10+ GB). A bigger drive will
not affect performance (except in a negative manner) unless it has
insufficient free space. Not the case here.

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS-MVP Shell/User

"chris" wrote in message
...
Hello Mary:

Without knowing what type of applications you're running on your system,
it
would be kind of hard to say if you require a new system or not.

One thing I do recommend before buying a new system, is to buy a new 40

or
80 GB HDD. Mirror or reinstall Windows to the new drive...if you're

still
not happy with the performance, you're best to buy a new system ....

Chris.

--
"All problems have a simple solution! The more complex the solution,

the
more ludicrous the analogy!"
"Mary" wrote in message
oups.com...
I have a Dell Dimension XPS T450MHz computer with a Pentium III (512K
Cache, whatever that means) I added RAM for a total of 224MB. The hard
drive is 13GB with only 2.97 GB used. OS is Windows 98SE My computer
is very slow: takes forever to boot up, takes forever to launch apps,
sometimes mouse is slow and jerky, sometimes hard drive runs alot. I
defrag and run scandisk regularly/empty recycle bin/delete temp file.
I've used regclean; deleted stuff from startup; played with virtual
memory; scanned for viruses/adware/spyware (have McAfee); changed to
network server setting, etc. Tried all the tweaks that I dare relating
to Win 98. I've physically cleaned out all the dust in the CPU and
tried to blow out all the dust around the exhaust fan. All to no
avail. Is it time to buy a new computer? Is the thing just wearing
out? It has been hot & humid here - any connection?

Thanks for any advice.







  #15  
Old September 9th 05, 12:22 AM posted to microsoft.public.win98.performance
chris
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 27
Default Is it time to buy a new computer?

Does becoming MS-MVP require the knowledge of computer hardware? With a
statement like that, I seriously doubt it!
--
"All problems have a simple solution! The more complex the solution, the
more ludicrous the analogy!"
"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
Why? She has plenty of HD free space already (10+ GB). A bigger drive will
not affect performance (except in a negative manner) unless it has
insufficient free space. Not the case here.

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS-MVP Shell/User

"chris" wrote in message
...
Hello Mary:

Without knowing what type of applications you're running on your system,
it
would be kind of hard to say if you require a new system or not.

One thing I do recommend before buying a new system, is to buy a new 40

or
80 GB HDD. Mirror or reinstall Windows to the new drive...if you're

still
not happy with the performance, you're best to buy a new system ....

Chris.

--
"All problems have a simple solution! The more complex the solution,

the
more ludicrous the analogy!"
"Mary" wrote in message
oups.com...
I have a Dell Dimension XPS T450MHz computer with a Pentium III (512K
Cache, whatever that means) I added RAM for a total of 224MB. The hard
drive is 13GB with only 2.97 GB used. OS is Windows 98SE My computer
is very slow: takes forever to boot up, takes forever to launch apps,
sometimes mouse is slow and jerky, sometimes hard drive runs alot. I
defrag and run scandisk regularly/empty recycle bin/delete temp file.
I've used regclean; deleted stuff from startup; played with virtual
memory; scanned for viruses/adware/spyware (have McAfee); changed to
network server setting, etc. Tried all the tweaks that I dare relating
to Win 98. I've physically cleaned out all the dust in the CPU and
tried to blow out all the dust around the exhaust fan. All to no
avail. Is it time to buy a new computer? Is the thing just wearing
out? It has been hot & humid here - any connection?

Thanks for any advice.







  #16  
Old September 9th 05, 01:11 AM
Gary S. Terhune
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

What I said was entirely correct. Would you care to support your contention
that it isn't? How does a giant hard drive help performance?

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS-MVP Shell/User

"chris" wrote in message
...
Does becoming MS-MVP require the knowledge of computer hardware? With a
statement like that, I seriously doubt it!
--
"All problems have a simple solution! The more complex the solution, the
more ludicrous the analogy!"
"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
Why? She has plenty of HD free space already (10+ GB). A bigger drive
will
not affect performance (except in a negative manner) unless it has
insufficient free space. Not the case here.

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS-MVP Shell/User

"chris" wrote in message
...
Hello Mary:

Without knowing what type of applications you're running on your
system,
it
would be kind of hard to say if you require a new system or not.

One thing I do recommend before buying a new system, is to buy a new 40

or
80 GB HDD. Mirror or reinstall Windows to the new drive...if you're

still
not happy with the performance, you're best to buy a new system ....

Chris.

--
"All problems have a simple solution! The more complex the solution,

the
more ludicrous the analogy!"
"Mary" wrote in message
oups.com...
I have a Dell Dimension XPS T450MHz computer with a Pentium III (512K
Cache, whatever that means) I added RAM for a total of 224MB. The
hard
drive is 13GB with only 2.97 GB used. OS is Windows 98SE My computer
is very slow: takes forever to boot up, takes forever to launch apps,
sometimes mouse is slow and jerky, sometimes hard drive runs alot. I
defrag and run scandisk regularly/empty recycle bin/delete temp file.
I've used regclean; deleted stuff from startup; played with virtual
memory; scanned for viruses/adware/spyware (have McAfee); changed to
network server setting, etc. Tried all the tweaks that I dare
relating
to Win 98. I've physically cleaned out all the dust in the CPU and
tried to blow out all the dust around the exhaust fan. All to no
avail. Is it time to buy a new computer? Is the thing just wearing
out? It has been hot & humid here - any connection?

Thanks for any advice.









  #17  
Old September 9th 05, 01:11 AM posted to microsoft.public.win98.performance
Gary S. Terhune
External Usenet User
 
Posts: 1,846
Default Is it time to buy a new computer?

What I said was entirely correct. Would you care to support your contention
that it isn't? How does a giant hard drive help performance?

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS-MVP Shell/User

"chris" wrote in message
...
Does becoming MS-MVP require the knowledge of computer hardware? With a
statement like that, I seriously doubt it!
--
"All problems have a simple solution! The more complex the solution, the
more ludicrous the analogy!"
"Gary S. Terhune" wrote in message
...
Why? She has plenty of HD free space already (10+ GB). A bigger drive
will
not affect performance (except in a negative manner) unless it has
insufficient free space. Not the case here.

--
Gary S. Terhune
MS-MVP Shell/User

"chris" wrote in message
...
Hello Mary:

Without knowing what type of applications you're running on your
system,
it
would be kind of hard to say if you require a new system or not.

One thing I do recommend before buying a new system, is to buy a new 40

or
80 GB HDD. Mirror or reinstall Windows to the new drive...if you're

still
not happy with the performance, you're best to buy a new system ....

Chris.

--
"All problems have a simple solution! The more complex the solution,

the
more ludicrous the analogy!"
"Mary" wrote in message
oups.com...
I have a Dell Dimension XPS T450MHz computer with a Pentium III (512K
Cache, whatever that means) I added RAM for a total of 224MB. The
hard
drive is 13GB with only 2.97 GB used. OS is Windows 98SE My computer
is very slow: takes forever to boot up, takes forever to launch apps,
sometimes mouse is slow and jerky, sometimes hard drive runs alot. I
defrag and run scandisk regularly/empty recycle bin/delete temp file.
I've used regclean; deleted stuff from startup; played with virtual
memory; scanned for viruses/adware/spyware (have McAfee); changed to
network server setting, etc. Tried all the tweaks that I dare
relating
to Win 98. I've physically cleaned out all the dust in the CPU and
tried to blow out all the dust around the exhaust fan. All to no
avail. Is it time to buy a new computer? Is the thing just wearing
out? It has been hot & humid here - any connection?

Thanks for any advice.









  #18  
Old September 9th 05, 01:53 AM
Mary
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Mr. Terhune: I checked for viruses/malware and all was clear. Followed
the Clean Boot instructions, then did scandisk & defrag. Didn't dare
to change AV apps just yet. Here's the list of background apps:

Microsoft Office Startup Group "C:\Program Files\Microsoft
Office\Office\OSA9.EXE" -b -l
Logitech Desktop Messenger Agent Startup Group "C:\Program
Files\Desktop Messenger\8876480\Program\LDMConf.exe" /start
run Win.ini hpfsched
LDM Registry (Per-User Run) C:\Program Files\Desktop
Messenger\8876480\Program\BackWeb-8876480.exe
Tau Monitor Registry (Machine Run) C:\PROGRAM FILES\AGNITUM\TAUSCAN
1.6\TAUMON.EXE
VsEcomrEXE Registry (Machine Run) C:\Program Files\Network
Associates\McAfee VirusScan\vsecomr.exe
CriticalUpdate Registry (Machine Run) c:\windows\SYSTEM\wucrtupd.exe
-startup
ScanRegistry Registry (Machine Run) c:\windows\scanregw.exe /autorun
SystemTray Registry (Machine Run) SysTray.Exe
MCAgentExe Registry (Machine
Run) C:\PROGRA~1\MCAFEE.COM\AGENT\mcagent.exe
files\mcafee.com\agent\mcagent.exe
MCUpdateExe Registry (Machine
Run) C:\PROGRA~1\MCAFEE.COM\AGENT\MCUPDATE.EXE
LoadPowerProfile Registry (Machine Run) Rundll32.exe
powrprof.dll,LoadCurrentPwrScheme
VSOCheckTask Registry (Machine
Run) "C:\PROGRA~1\MCAFEE.COM\VSO\MCMNHDLR.EXE" /checktask
VirusScan Online Registry (Machine
Run) "C:\PROGRA~1\MCAFEE.COM\VSO\mcvsshld.exe"
MPFExe Registry (Machine
Run) C:\PROGRA~1\MCAFEE.COM\PERSON~1\MPFTRAY.EXE
EM_EXEC Registry (Machine
Run) C:\PROGRA~1\LOGITECH\MOUSEW~1\SYSTEM\EM_EXEC.EXE
mdac_runonce Registry (Machine Run) C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\runonce.exe
TaskMonitor Registry (Machine Run) c:\windows\taskmon.exe
SchedulingAgent Registry (Machine Service) mstask.exe
McVsRte Registry (Machine
Service) C:\PROGRA~1\MCAFEE.COM\VSO\mcvsrte.exe /embedding
KB891711 Registry (Machine
Service) c:\windows\SYSTEM\KB891711\KB891711.EXE
LoadPowerProfile Registry (Machine Service) Rundll32.exe
powrprof.dll,LoadCurrentPwrScheme

Your material stated that it's not a good solution to disable items in
msconfig so I need instruction on how to do it. I had played around
with unchecking boxes based on info from sysinfo.org site which may
have resulted in the unresponsive mouse problem. Most items on the
list relate to McAfee...maybe that's what's slowing things down. As
mentioned before I wondered about the computer overheating. I don't
live in an air-conditioned house and even though there are not too many
really hot days in Maine (2 seasons he winter & August)it does seem
like the computer runs better when it's cold.

Thanks, Mary

P. S. What is "MS-MVP"?

Thanks to all who have responded to my question

  #19  
Old September 9th 05, 01:53 AM posted to microsoft.public.win98.performance
Mary[_4_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 4
Default Is it time to buy a new computer?

Mr. Terhune: I checked for viruses/malware and all was clear. Followed
the Clean Boot instructions, then did scandisk & defrag. Didn't dare
to change AV apps just yet. Here's the list of background apps:

Microsoft Office Startup Group "C:\Program Files\Microsoft
Office\Office\OSA9.EXE" -b -l
Logitech Desktop Messenger Agent Startup Group "C:\Program
Files\Desktop Messenger\8876480\Program\LDMConf.exe" /start
run Win.ini hpfsched
LDM Registry (Per-User Run) C:\Program Files\Desktop
Messenger\8876480\Program\BackWeb-8876480.exe
Tau Monitor Registry (Machine Run) C:\PROGRAM FILES\AGNITUM\TAUSCAN
1.6\TAUMON.EXE
VsEcomrEXE Registry (Machine Run) C:\Program Files\Network
Associates\McAfee VirusScan\vsecomr.exe
CriticalUpdate Registry (Machine Run) c:\windows\SYSTEM\wucrtupd.exe
-startup
ScanRegistry Registry (Machine Run) c:\windows\scanregw.exe /autorun
SystemTray Registry (Machine Run) SysTray.Exe
MCAgentExe Registry (Machine
Run) C:\PROGRA~1\MCAFEE.COM\AGENT\mcagent.exe
files\mcafee.com\agent\mcagent.exe
MCUpdateExe Registry (Machine
Run) C:\PROGRA~1\MCAFEE.COM\AGENT\MCUPDATE.EXE
LoadPowerProfile Registry (Machine Run) Rundll32.exe
powrprof.dll,LoadCurrentPwrScheme
VSOCheckTask Registry (Machine
Run) "C:\PROGRA~1\MCAFEE.COM\VSO\MCMNHDLR.EXE" /checktask
VirusScan Online Registry (Machine
Run) "C:\PROGRA~1\MCAFEE.COM\VSO\mcvsshld.exe"
MPFExe Registry (Machine
Run) C:\PROGRA~1\MCAFEE.COM\PERSON~1\MPFTRAY.EXE
EM_EXEC Registry (Machine
Run) C:\PROGRA~1\LOGITECH\MOUSEW~1\SYSTEM\EM_EXEC.EXE
mdac_runonce Registry (Machine Run) C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\runonce.exe
TaskMonitor Registry (Machine Run) c:\windows\taskmon.exe
SchedulingAgent Registry (Machine Service) mstask.exe
McVsRte Registry (Machine
Service) C:\PROGRA~1\MCAFEE.COM\VSO\mcvsrte.exe /embedding
KB891711 Registry (Machine
Service) c:\windows\SYSTEM\KB891711\KB891711.EXE
LoadPowerProfile Registry (Machine Service) Rundll32.exe
powrprof.dll,LoadCurrentPwrScheme

Your material stated that it's not a good solution to disable items in
msconfig so I need instruction on how to do it. I had played around
with unchecking boxes based on info from sysinfo.org site which may
have resulted in the unresponsive mouse problem. Most items on the
list relate to McAfee...maybe that's what's slowing things down. As
mentioned before I wondered about the computer overheating. I don't
live in an air-conditioned house and even though there are not too many
really hot days in Maine (2 seasons he winter & August)it does seem
like the computer runs better when it's cold.

Thanks, Mary

P. S. What is "MS-MVP"?

Thanks to all who have responded to my question

  #20  
Old September 9th 05, 03:06 AM posted to microsoft.public.win98.performance
glee
External Usenet User
 
Posts: 2,458
Default Is it time to buy a new computer?

On simple way to find out if it is McAfee, is to temporarily disable ALL McAfee
startup items, and restart. Be sure to stay OFFLINE while you have the A-V disabled
(unplug the cable if you have to, for broadband). See if the problems still
exist....that may tell you if McAfee is involved.
--
Glen Ventura, MS MVP Shell/User, A+
http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm

"Mary" wrote in message
ups.com...
Mr. Terhune: I checked for viruses/malware and all was clear. Followed
the Clean Boot instructions, then did scandisk & defrag. Didn't dare
to change AV apps just yet. Here's the list of background apps:

Microsoft Office Startup Group "C:\Program Files\Microsoft
Office\Office\OSA9.EXE" -b -l
Logitech Desktop Messenger Agent Startup Group "C:\Program
Files\Desktop Messenger\8876480\Program\LDMConf.exe" /start
run Win.ini hpfsched
LDM Registry (Per-User Run) C:\Program Files\Desktop
Messenger\8876480\Program\BackWeb-8876480.exe
Tau Monitor Registry (Machine Run) C:\PROGRAM FILES\AGNITUM\TAUSCAN
1.6\TAUMON.EXE
VsEcomrEXE Registry (Machine Run) C:\Program Files\Network
Associates\McAfee VirusScan\vsecomr.exe
CriticalUpdate Registry (Machine Run) c:\windows\SYSTEM\wucrtupd.exe
-startup
ScanRegistry Registry (Machine Run) c:\windows\scanregw.exe /autorun
SystemTray Registry (Machine Run) SysTray.Exe
MCAgentExe Registry (Machine
Run) C:\PROGRA~1\MCAFEE.COM\AGENT\mcagent.exe
files\mcafee.com\agent\mcagent.exe
MCUpdateExe Registry (Machine
Run) C:\PROGRA~1\MCAFEE.COM\AGENT\MCUPDATE.EXE
LoadPowerProfile Registry (Machine Run) Rundll32.exe
powrprof.dll,LoadCurrentPwrScheme
VSOCheckTask Registry (Machine
Run) "C:\PROGRA~1\MCAFEE.COM\VSO\MCMNHDLR.EXE" /checktask
VirusScan Online Registry (Machine
Run) "C:\PROGRA~1\MCAFEE.COM\VSO\mcvsshld.exe"
MPFExe Registry (Machine
Run) C:\PROGRA~1\MCAFEE.COM\PERSON~1\MPFTRAY.EXE
EM_EXEC Registry (Machine
Run) C:\PROGRA~1\LOGITECH\MOUSEW~1\SYSTEM\EM_EXEC.EXE
mdac_runonce Registry (Machine Run) C:\WINDOWS\SYSTEM\runonce.exe
TaskMonitor Registry (Machine Run) c:\windows\taskmon.exe
SchedulingAgent Registry (Machine Service) mstask.exe
McVsRte Registry (Machine
Service) C:\PROGRA~1\MCAFEE.COM\VSO\mcvsrte.exe /embedding
KB891711 Registry (Machine
Service) c:\windows\SYSTEM\KB891711\KB891711.EXE
LoadPowerProfile Registry (Machine Service) Rundll32.exe
powrprof.dll,LoadCurrentPwrScheme

Your material stated that it's not a good solution to disable items in
msconfig so I need instruction on how to do it. I had played around
with unchecking boxes based on info from sysinfo.org site which may
have resulted in the unresponsive mouse problem. Most items on the
list relate to McAfee...maybe that's what's slowing things down. As
mentioned before I wondered about the computer overheating. I don't
live in an air-conditioned house and even though there are not too many
really hot days in Maine (2 seasons he winter & August)it does seem
like the computer runs better when it's cold.

Thanks, Mary

P. S. What is "MS-MVP"?

Thanks to all who have responded to my question


 




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