Download. Ccleaner and run it to clean out dead files. It’s free. Cnet has it. It might help.
Download. Ccleaner and run it to clean out dead files. It’s free. Cnet has it. It might help.
Did you run diagnostics on the hard drive and memory chips?
If all else fails try a system restore to a safe point before the problem surfaced.
One other note, some Dell produced last year had similar issues that required a return to the store. Studio models I believe.
Have you run msconfig to see what are your startup programs? You might want to uncheck what you don’t normally use.
One more note...get more RAM, 512MB is not really enough anymore. 1-2GB preferable.
When it stalls out, open the task manager (Ctrl+Shift+Esc) and see what’s eating your CPU.
Go to My Computer, and check the properties on each drive to ensure that indexing is turned off - number one reason why Dell’s come to a creaping crawl.
Either your hard drive is on it’s last legs, your memory has something wrong with it, or your motherboard is fixing to die.
Next time it happens, turn off your antivirus/spybot/etc and see if that fixes it. Sometimes these things periodically go into overdrive and slow everything to a crawl. If the problem is worse when loading sites with lots of extra stuff (commercial news with a zillion ads, eBay listings, etc), try turning off Phishing Filter — it screens every single frame/item that’s trying to load, and this can easily be in the dozens for a single webpage such as the examples I gave.
Is your computer plugged in?
And honestly, Windows 2000 simply can’t support a lot of what’s on today’s websites — that’s probably a big part of your problem. But before giving up (assuming you don’t want to upgrade) make sure you have the highest version of Explorer that Windows 2000 can support, and that you have installed all the random stuff that modern webpages want, to the extent that Windows 2000 is able to support them (but there are some key ones it can’t support).
I had these issues with a Windows Me machine, refused to buy a new computer with Vista, and ended up being very happy with a refurbished HP Pavilion with XP that I got off eBay — $175 including shipping, restored to original factory configuration, and original factory discs included.
Is this one of the small form factor 150s by any chance? Those things cook hard drives after a few years like nobody’s business. They won’t stop working altogether, but they’ll just slow down so much that they’re not worth working with any more.
If you happen to have a spare hard drive knocking about, I’d swap it out and try that.
Doubt it’s hardware related. More likely Windows has become corrupted or one of your installed programs that runs at start-up may have become corrupted.
Go to your START button and click run, type MSCONFIG in the box and hit enter. Click on start-up and un-check KNOWN programs you’ve installed - only uncheck the ones you are familiar with. Click OK then re-start your computer and see if that had any effect. If it did, then you’ll know it was one of the programs you un-checked that is causing the problem.
Go back to MSCONFIG and re-check them one at a time, re-starting your computer each time until you find the offending program. Leave it unchecked or go into CONTROL PANEL, click on ADD/REMOVE PROGRAMS and un-install the program from there.
Hope that helps.
One other thing you can do. Download HijackThis and run the diagnostic. It will create a log file of what is running on your system. Go through it line by line to see if there is something out of place.
i use avg free to keep my registry clean
but i bet you can find the culprit under the processes tab
, your ram can be upgraded real easy and you can do it your self , 512 is a bit slow 1gig is cheap like 30 bucks
that will likely help too
download cwshredder and run it before doing anything else. It checks for about 60 variants that corrupt everything from msconfig to your toolbars.
Then www.malwarebytes.org and download the free version. Run the scanner under safe mode.
That get you to square one for hardware testing.
Finally download and run SpywareBlaster to prevent problems from coming into your computer.
Remember to update these programs at least once a week (I find Tuesdays best).
Good luck.
Since it’s a Dell, you should be able to boot into the Utility Partition and run the full diagnostics.
This is the best way I know how to check everything out on a Dell. It has helped me find bad memory on more than one computer.