I think you're onto something with the MS firewall being
activated - it is vital that it was NOT activated when
you installed NORTON or strange conflicts do occur.
To be blunt, you may have to uninstall all NORTON
products, check to see XP runs smoothly and the firewall
is not up (but don't risk going online without a
firewall!). XP's firewall is under start/control
panel/network connections - select network tasks - click
change settings - advanced tab (internet conn. firewall
section) uncheck 'protect my computer blah blah blah'.
clcik OK twice to close windows. VOILA
You might be able to do the above without the
uninstalling but I doubt it cos it sounds a bit messed up
now - try it and see.
>-----Original Message-----
>....after an e-mail send/recieve.
>Pulling up the Windows Task Manager reveals "ccapp.exe"
is 99% of CPU.
>
>Find out from news group that ccapp belongs to Norton
AV; go to the Symantec
>website and search the knowledge base for an answer.
>
>Here, I'm told to disable the firewall and try sending
an e-mail- if it
>happens again, its a problem with scanning outgoings e-
mails.
>
>I tried this, and lo and behold, ccapp goes crazy again-
so it obviously
>isn't the firewall, which is currently down, so what I
need to do is open
>Norton AV and disable scanning outgoing e-mails.
>
>Simple enough, so I do this after a restart (to get
ccapp back, since I must
>end the process if I want to do anything once it goes
haywire), disable the
>scanning, try sending another e-mail-
>
>And ccapp goes off its rocker again, leaving my system
to chug along, barely
>even able to switch which window is in the forefront.
>
>Now what?
>Ok, I look at the Symantec site again, figuring I'll try
working with the
>firewall portion of the problem- perhaps both things are
happening.
>
>But after following the next link I see that the firewall
(s) in question are
>all the non-Norton ones- that supposedly, the Norton
firewall is
>pre-configured so it won't cause conflicts.
>Only trouble with that is, I *have no* other firewall
running.
>Unless, the one in Win XP was set up by Dell or Windows
itself before the
>system was sent to me?
>I don't even know where XP's firewall is located...
>
>
>So to summarize: if its not a firewall, and its not the
e-mail, then its not
>problem, according to Symantec.
>But ccapp and my system say otherwise.
>
>Anyone have any ideas?
>Thanks.
>
>
>.
>
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