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View Full Version : Computer question #11ty billion and 11ty billion one


Squirrel
06-30-2009, 02:38 PM
the fuller a hard drive gets the slower it performs correct?
the more icons you have on your desktop the slower stuff loads right?

GP99GT
06-30-2009, 02:50 PM
1. sort of...it gets fragmented but you can run disk defragmenter

2. no

computers get slow because of spyware, too many/unnecessary applications running at once, and disk fragmentation

WildBillyT
06-30-2009, 03:02 PM
1. sort of...it gets fragmented but you can run disk defragmenter

2. no*

computers get slow because of spyware, too many/unnecessary applications running at once, and disk fragmentation

*Sort of. But it's mostly negligable. A better way to speed up your boot time and save your display is to run a plain black background.

maroman88
06-30-2009, 06:08 PM
is there a way to disable all the programs that open for no reason at start up... i have no idea wat some of them are, even after tracking them down into their folders

WildBillyT
06-30-2009, 06:19 PM
is there a way to disable all the programs that open for no reason at start up... i have no idea wat some of them are, even after tracking them down into their folders

Start->Run->msconfig

Startup tab, uncheck what you don't want to start. Be careful, look up the unknowns on Google.

GP99GT
06-30-2009, 11:11 PM
*Sort of. But it's mostly negligable. A better way to speed up your boot time and save your display is to run a plain black background.

eh, with computers nowadays with 2 gigs+ of ram and 3+ghz CPUs...not a big deal. then again, some people are stuck in the stone age when it comes to computers

jims69camaro
07-01-2009, 06:12 AM
if you have tracked it down to its folder and it serves you no purpose and is not system dependent, then add/remove programs and get it out of there.

think of it like this (as far as speed goes): you can do one thing very fast. you can do two things at once, but not as fast as only doing one. you can do four things at once, but not as fast as two. now, ramp that up into the tens of thousands of things we expect our computers to do all at once, and you can see how it gets bogged down. spyware (and viruses, and all bad programs) are invisible to you, so you don't know they're running. for you, nothing has changed, only the number of minutes it takes to startup your favorite game. these programs do exist and they are built to be hidden from a typical computer user. there are programs out there that can sniff them out and get rid of them, but theyre very expensive. also, there are services out there, as well, that do kinda the same stuff, but they are expensive as well. the cheap way out is to learn from others and do your own investigating. you'll not be able to find them all (not even the leading anti-virus companies can find all of them, which is why they have periodic updates.)

Squirrel
07-01-2009, 10:43 AM
if you have tracked it down to its folder and it serves you no purpose and is not system dependent, then add/remove programs and get it out of there.

think of it like this (as far as speed goes): you can do one thing very fast. you can do two things at once, but not as fast as only doing one. you can do four things at once, but not as fast as two. now, ramp that up into the tens of thousands of things we expect our computers to do all at once, and you can see how it gets bogged down. spyware (and viruses, and all bad programs) are invisible to you, so you don't know they're running. for you, nothing has changed, only the number of minutes it takes to startup your favorite game. these programs do exist and they are built to be hidden from a typical computer user. there are programs out there that can sniff them out and get rid of them, but theyre very expensive. also, there are services out there, as well, that do kinda the same stuff, but they are expensive as well. the cheap way out is to learn from others and do your own investigating. you'll not be able to find them all (not even the leading anti-virus companies can find all of them, which is why they have periodic updates.)

since when is software expensive?

Tru2Chevy
07-01-2009, 03:59 PM
since when is software expensive?

Nice and free: http://www.ubcd4win.com/

- Justin

jims69camaro
07-03-2009, 08:33 AM
since when is software expensive?

retail software is expensive. norton in a retail box, just for the anti-virus, is $29.99 - i can think of several things i would rather spoend that money on (which is why i use AVG).

Squirrel
07-03-2009, 02:24 PM
i dont think ive ever not had free software on my computer lol

ryanfx
07-04-2009, 11:22 PM
i dont think ive ever not had free software on my computer lol

you're so cool eric. can you teach how to pirate too?

thunder
07-05-2009, 02:08 AM
AD-aware is really good for dealing with spyware and the basic version os free

Firebird92
07-05-2009, 06:34 PM
The best software i seen its call PC firewall Plus its free and comes with a firewall anti-virus and malware detector