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#76
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Right. One thing I did not think of to ask the OP was whether he had checked to see what services were running when he scans. I had a recent experience in which software I was already using was updated and then, all of a sudden, I found my image backup running at half the speed that I was used to seeing. I checked my services and found that the indexing service was started. I could not figure out why, since it was previously disabled. I determined that the updated software had turned on the indexing service. I reconfigured that software and also made sure that the indexing service was disabled again. That immediately restored the backup speed I was used to. |
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#77
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#78
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#79
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I was running a scan when I posted my last post, so I checked the task manager, just for the heck of it, not really knowing what to look for. Anyway, thought I'd take a screenshot and post it here.....maybe someone would see something not right. I use FastStone Capture to take screen shots, and it's not exactly a resource hog by any means, and it was funny, the second I clicked on the 'Capture Rectangle Region' in the toll, my scan stopped.....the little icon in my taskbar stopped spinning, as if it can't handle the scan and that screen capture utility being open at the same time. I know it's an old computer, but I do have a GB of RAM, and nothing else is running but the scanner and I opened this utility. That seems like RAM to me, but I ran memtest overnight, with 8 passes, I believe it was, and it didn't show anything. Here's a screenshot of my task manager, if that helps at all.
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#80
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FYI. Yes you do have something else running in that screenie, I can see Firefox.exe running and it's using around 125MB of RAM at that moment. Plus plugin-container.exe using another 20MB (it's the Firefox plugin module) And yeah, I also don't think that NOD32 is the "troublemaker" in this. It must be something else Software/Hardware related, but what....... ![]() (I personally don't think it's HW related.)
__________________
OpenDNS ESET Smart Security -A Heavy product is not the same as a Bloated product and vice versa- |
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#81
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#82
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With XP, you have to look in the control panel under Performance and Maintenance, Administrative Tools, Services (in the classic menu, Administrative Tools can be accessed directly). If you had Win 7, you could see the Services in the Task Manager. That's just one of the improvements, but we who have old computers can see these only on the computers that belong to others. Anyway, when you open the Services tab, you can see what services are installed, and which ones are "started." It is the ones that are started that will use resources. I find it is better to close the browser and my e-mail app when running a scan with NOD32. |
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#83
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I've attached a screenshot of the services, and I took it while the scan was running, for whatever it's worth. |
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#84
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__________________
OpenDNS ESET Smart Security -A Heavy product is not the same as a Bloated product and vice versa- |
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#85
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I don't see anything abnormal, off hand. I did note that you have shell hardware detection enabled and I don't. I had to check on why that was and then I saw the relationship between that and autoplay. If you have autoplay enabled, you need shell hardware detection. I have autoplay disabled on my system. That's not a resource issue, just a security choice. Apart from that, there are obviously some hardware differences such as your having an Nvidia driver and I don't. I do have 2GB of RAM, and more space available on my hard drive (only about 35 percent in use out of 128GB on the boot partition), but you weren't having problems with regard to disk space and memory before. There is always the possibility that there is something wrong with components on the motherboard such as capacitors failing, which can affect the stability of power to your drives and memory. I had that problem with the motherboard in my system, so that I had to get a different box with a different motherboard that did not have failing components and swap the memory and hard drive. That fixed some issues that I was experiencing respecting slow operation from time to time and problems with lost clusters. Frankly, unless you know someone who can do such a swap at minimal cost (no more than $100), it's not worth fixing a computer that is 8 years old if there is a motherboard problem. |
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