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Boot Up time question
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Boot Up time question
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Boot Up time question |
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#1 |
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Guest
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What is a reasonable time for Win 2000 to boot up?
I have moved from 98SE recently to a Intel 333 PC with RAID (three HD's) and the system takes about 5 min. to boot up. I originaly thought that must be normal but now wonder if that is so and what/ how can I speed this up. Thanks for any assistance, Peter Stacey |
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#2 |
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What service pack are you running on? There is an issue with drive or
partition enumeration that can cause slow boot that was fixed with sp4. Roxio software can also cause slow boots. Any errors showing in the Event Viewer? Paste them here maybe someone can help, without that info it's a bit like poking around in the dark. John L. Peter Stacey wrote: > What is a reasonable time for Win 2000 to boot up? > I have moved from 98SE recently to a Intel 333 PC with RAID (three HD's) and > the system takes about 5 min. to boot up. I originaly thought that must be > normal but now wonder if that is so and what/ how can I speed this up. > > Thanks for any assistance, Peter Stacey > > |
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#3 |
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Thanks for your response John.
I am running Win 2K with patch 4 build 2195. The system also has SCSI as well as RAID is PII 333. The Application Log info for today is as follows: Type Date Time Source Category Event User Computer Information 25/11/2004 7:07:51 AM SceCli None 1704 N/A LPS-W2K Information 25/11/2004 7:07:43 AM EvntAgnt None 2018 N/A LPS-W2K Information 25/11/2004 7:07:40 AM WMDM PMSP Service None 105 N/A LPS-W2K Information 25/11/2004 7:07:20 AM Avg7UpdSvc None 1 N/A LPS-W2K The System Log info for today is: Type Date Time Source Category Event User Computer Information 25/11/2004 7:50:28 AM Automatic Updates Installation 17 N/A LPS-W2K Information 25/11/2004 7:10:40 AM RemoteAccess None 20158 N/A LPS-W2K Warning 25/11/2004 7:08:33 AM Dhcp None 1007 N/A LPS-W2K Information 25/11/2004 7:07:45 AM SNMP None 1001 N/A LPS-W2K Information 25/11/2004 7:07:14 AM eventlog None 6005 N/A LPS-W2K Information 25/11/2004 7:07:14 AM eventlog None 6009 N/A LPS-W2K Unfortunately it all means little to me :-( Thank you for your interest and help. ========================== "John John" <audetweld@nbnet.nb.ca> wrote in message news:u4XWM%23c0EHA.3364@TK2MSFTNGP12.phx.gbl... > What service pack are you running on? There is an issue with drive or partition enumeration that can cause slow boot that was fixed with sp4. Roxio software can also cause slow boots. Any errors showing in the > Event Viewer? Paste them here maybe someone can help, without that info it's a bit like poking around in the dark. > John > ------------------ > L. Peter Stacey wrote: > > What is a reasonable time for Win 2000 to boot up? > > I have moved from 98SE recently to a Intel 333 PC with RAID (three HD's) and the system takes about 5 min. to boot up. I originaly thought that must be normal but now wonder if that is so and what/ how can I speed this up. > > Thanks for any assistance, Peter Stacey |
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#4 |
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Ok... Let's start by cleaning that up a bit to see what we have here, it
will help others help us. AppLog: Type Time Source Category Event Information 7:07:51 SceCli None 1704 Information 7:07:43 EvntAgnt None 2018 Information 7:07:40 WMDM PMSP Service None 105 Information 7:07:20 Avg7UpdSvc None 1 Not too much out of the usual there. SceCli can cause slow logons but for the time being we'll leave that aside, it's a bit of a "non event" in most cases and is quite normal to see in the log. Not for me to tell you how to run your pc but you should consider whether or not you really want WMDM PMSP Service to start automatically. It's a Windows Media Player thing that in my opinion does next to nothing other than opening security holes on your pc and consume resources for nothing. You could set it to "manual" start. Make sure you have the security patches for Media Player. I'm also not a big fan of "AutoUpdates" of any kind starting when I boot my pc, I AM NOT recommending that you turnoff your AVG Auto Update feature but you could temporarilly turn it off to troubleshoot the slow boot, eliminate it as a possible cause for now. Now for the System log... Syslog: Type Time Source Category Event Information 7:50:28 Automatic Updates Installation 17 Information 7:10:40 RemoteAccess None 20158 Warning 7:08:33 Dhcp None 1007 Information 7:07:45 SNMP None 1001 Information 7:07:14 eventlog None 6005 Information 7:07:14 eventlog None 6009 A few questions here. Is this box on a network? What does the "Warning" say on Dhcp event 17? (Right click on it the click on "Properties" and paste the contents of the Description box). I'm also not sure that I understand your "move from 98SE". What do you mean? Same box? OS Upgrade? Or OS clean install? John L. Peter Stacey wrote: > Thanks for your response John. > I am running Win 2K with patch 4 build 2195. The system also has SCSI as > well as RAID is PII 333. > > The Application Log info for today is as follows: > Type Date Time Source Category > Event User Computer > Information 25/11/2004 7:07:51 AM SceCli None 1704 > N/A LPS-W2K > Information 25/11/2004 7:07:43 AM EvntAgnt None 2018 N/A > LPS-W2K > Information 25/11/2004 7:07:40 AM WMDM PMSP Service None 105 N/A > LPS-W2K > Information 25/11/2004 7:07:20 AM Avg7UpdSvc None 1 N/A > LPS-W2K > > The System Log info for today is: > Type Date Time Source > Category Event User Computer > Information 25/11/2004 7:50:28 AM Automatic Updates Installation 17 > N/A LPS-W2K > Information 25/11/2004 7:10:40 AM RemoteAccess None 20158 > N/A LPS-W2K > Warning 25/11/2004 7:08:33 AM Dhcp None > 1007 N/A LPS-W2K > Information 25/11/2004 7:07:45 AM SNMP None 1001 > N/A LPS-W2K > Information 25/11/2004 7:07:14 AM eventlog None > 6005 N/A LPS-W2K > Information 25/11/2004 7:07:14 AM eventlog None > 6009 N/A LPS-W2K > > Unfortunately it all means little to me :-( > Thank you for your interest and help. > ========================== > > "John John" <audetweld@nbnet.nb.ca> wrote in message > news:u4XWM%23c0EHA.3364@TK2MSFTNGP12.phx.gbl... > >>What service pack are you running on? There is an issue with drive or > > partition enumeration that can cause slow boot that was fixed with sp4. > Roxio software can also cause slow boots. Any errors showing in the > >>Event Viewer? Paste them here maybe someone can help, without that info > > it's a bit like poking around in the dark. > >>John >>------------------ >>L. Peter Stacey wrote: >> >>>What is a reasonable time for Win 2000 to boot up? >>>I have moved from 98SE recently to a Intel 333 PC with RAID (three HD's) > > and the system takes about 5 min. to boot up. I originaly thought that must > be normal but now wonder if that is so and what/ how can I speed this up. > >>>Thanks for any assistance, Peter Stacey > > > |
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#5 |
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Guest
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John.
I don't need the automatic updates feature, am happy to do this manualy. The PC is a former server from an office enviroment but I have re-installed W2K from scratch. My referece to "have moved from 98SE recently to a Intel 333 PC" is just that Win 2K is a new envioroment and I am totaly unfamiliar with it. e.g. in Win 98SE I would have used BLA.exe (Boot Log Analiser) to analise my start up system. At the moment the W2K PC is cable (Lan) connected to my other PC which runs Win 98SE. That PC (Celeron 400) was/is? My main machine but have HD problems so am trying to recover data from it, that is why the two PC's are connected at present. Thanks for your assistance. Peter Stacey "John John" <audetweld@nbnet.nb.ca> wrote in message news:O9F%23cRq0EHA.2196@TK2MSFTNGP14.phx.gbl... > Ok... Let's start by cleaning that up a bit to see what we have here, it > will help others help us. > > AppLog: > Type Time Source Category Event > Information 7:07:51 SceCli None 1704 > Information 7:07:43 EvntAgnt None 2018 > Information 7:07:40 WMDM PMSP Service None 105 > Information 7:07:20 Avg7UpdSvc None 1 > > Not too much out of the usual there. SceCli can cause slow logons but > for the time being we'll leave that aside, it's a bit of a "non event" > in most cases and is quite normal to see in the log. > > Not for me to tell you how to run your pc but you should consider whether or not you really want WMDM PMSP Service to start automatically. It's a Windows Media Player thing that in my opinion does next to > nothing other than opening security holes on your pc and consume resources for nothing. You could set it to "manual" start. Make sure you have the security patches for Media Player. I'm also not a big fan > of "AutoUpdates" of any kind starting when I boot my pc, I AM NOT recommending that you turnoff your AVG Auto Update feature but you could temporarilly turn it off to troubleshoot the slow boot, eliminate it as > a possible cause for now. Now for the System log... > > Syslog: > Type Time Source Category Event > Information 7:50:28 Automatic Updates Installation 17 > Information 7:10:40 RemoteAccess None 20158 > Warning 7:08:33 Dhcp None 1007 > Information 7:07:45 SNMP None 1001 > Information 7:07:14 eventlog None 6005 > Information 7:07:14 eventlog None 6009 > > A few questions here. Is this box on a network? What does the "Warning" say on Dhcp event 17? (Right click on it the click on "Properties" and paste the contents of the Description box). > I'm also not sure that I understand your "move from 98SE". What do you mean? Same box? OS Upgrade? Or OS clean install? > John > > L. Peter Stacey wrote: > > Thanks for your response John. > > I am running Win 2K with patch 4 build 2195. The system also has SCSI as > > well as RAID is PII 333. > > > > The Application Log info for today is as follows: > > Type Date Time Source Category > > Event User Computer > > Information 25/11/2004 7:07:51 AM SceCli None 1704 > > N/A LPS-W2K > > Information 25/11/2004 7:07:43 AM EvntAgnt None 2018 N/A > > LPS-W2K > > Information 25/11/2004 7:07:40 AM WMDM PMSP Service None 105 N/A > > LPS-W2K > > Information 25/11/2004 7:07:20 AM Avg7UpdSvc None 1 N/A > > LPS-W2K > > > > The System Log info for today is: > > Type Date Time Source > > Category Event User Computer > > Information 25/11/2004 7:50:28 AM Automatic Updates Installation 17 > > N/A LPS-W2K > > Information 25/11/2004 7:10:40 AM RemoteAccess None 20158 > > N/A LPS-W2K > > Warning 25/11/2004 7:08:33 AM Dhcp None > > 1007 N/A LPS-W2K > > Information 25/11/2004 7:07:45 AM SNMP None 1001 > > N/A LPS-W2K > > Information 25/11/2004 7:07:14 AM eventlog None > > 6005 N/A LPS-W2K > > Information 25/11/2004 7:07:14 AM eventlog None > > 6009 N/A LPS-W2K > > > > Unfortunately it all means little to me :-( > > Thank you for your interest and help. > > ========================== > > > > "John John" <audetweld@nbnet.nb.ca> wrote in message > > news:u4XWM%23c0EHA.3364@TK2MSFTNGP12.phx.gbl... > > > >>What service pack are you running on? There is an issue with drive or > > > > partition enumeration that can cause slow boot that was fixed with sp4. > > Roxio software can also cause slow boots. Any errors showing in the > > > >>Event Viewer? Paste them here maybe someone can help, without that info > > > > it's a bit like poking around in the dark. > > > >>John > >>------------------ > >>L. Peter Stacey wrote: > >> > >>>What is a reasonable time for Win 2000 to boot up? > >>>I have moved from 98SE recently to a Intel 333 PC with RAID (three HD's) > > > > and the system takes about 5 min. to boot up. I originaly thought that must > > be normal but now wonder if that is so and what/ how can I speed this up. > > > >>>Thanks for any assistance, Peter Stacey > > > > > > |
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#6 |
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Guest
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John.
I don't need the automatic updates during startup am happy to do this manualy. The PC is a former server from an office enviroment but I have installed W2K from scratch. My reference to "I have moved from 98SE recently to a Intel 333 PC with RAID" was just to say that I am not familiar with W2K's operation. With Win 98SE I would have used BLA.EXE (Boot Log Analiser) to see what was holding things up during startUp. However at the moment it is cable (Lan) connected to another PC which runs Win 98SE. That PC (Celeron 400) was/is? My main machine but have HD problems so am trying to recover data from it that is why the two PC's are connected at present. Thanks for your help, Cheers from "Down Under" Peter Stacey. --------------------------------------------------------- "John John" <audetweld@nbnet.nb.ca> wrote in message news:O9F%23cRq0EHA.2196@TK2MSFTNGP14.phx.gbl... > Ok... Let's start by cleaning that up a bit to see what we have here, it > will help others help us. > > AppLog: > Type Time Source Category Event > Information 7:07:51 SceCli None 1704 > Information 7:07:43 EvntAgnt None 2018 > Information 7:07:40 WMDM PMSP Service None 105 > Information 7:07:20 Avg7UpdSvc None 1 > > Not too much out of the usual there. SceCli can cause slow logons but > for the time being we'll leave that aside, it's a bit of a "non event" > in most cases and is quite normal to see in the log. > > Not for me to tell you how to run your pc but you should consider > whether or not you really want WMDM PMSP Service to start automatically. > It's a Windows Media Player thing that in my opinion does next to > nothing other than opening security holes on your pc and consume > resources for nothing. You could set it to "manual" start. Make sure > you have the security patches for Media Player. I'm also not a big fan > of "AutoUpdates" of any kind starting when I boot my pc, I AM NOT > recommending that you turnoff your AVG Auto Update feature but you could > temporarilly turn it off to troubleshoot the slow boot, eliminate it as > a possible cause for now. Now for the System log... > > Syslog: > Type Time Source Category Event > Information 7:50:28 Automatic Updates Installation 17 > Information 7:10:40 RemoteAccess None 20158 > Warning 7:08:33 Dhcp None 1007 > Information 7:07:45 SNMP None 1001 > Information 7:07:14 eventlog None 6005 > Information 7:07:14 eventlog None 6009 > > A few questions here. Is this box on a network? What does the > "Warning" say on Dhcp event 17? (Right click on it the click on > "Properties" and paste the contents of the Description box). > > I'm also not sure that I understand your "move from 98SE". What do you > mean? Same box? OS Upgrade? Or OS clean install? > > John > > > L. Peter Stacey wrote: > > Thanks for your response John. > > I am running Win 2K with patch 4 build 2195. The system also has SCSI as > > well as RAID is PII 333. > > > > The Application Log info for today is as follows: > > Type Date Time Source Category > > Event User Computer > > Information 25/11/2004 7:07:51 AM SceCli None 1704 > > N/A LPS-W2K > > Information 25/11/2004 7:07:43 AM EvntAgnt None 2018 N/A > > LPS-W2K > > Information 25/11/2004 7:07:40 AM WMDM PMSP Service None 105 N/A > > LPS-W2K > > Information 25/11/2004 7:07:20 AM Avg7UpdSvc None 1 N/A > > LPS-W2K > > > > The System Log info for today is: > > Type Date Time Source > > Category Event User Computer > > Information 25/11/2004 7:50:28 AM Automatic Updates Installation 17 > > N/A LPS-W2K > > Information 25/11/2004 7:10:40 AM RemoteAccess None 20158 > > N/A LPS-W2K > > Warning 25/11/2004 7:08:33 AM Dhcp None > > 1007 N/A LPS-W2K > > Information 25/11/2004 7:07:45 AM SNMP None 1001 > > N/A LPS-W2K > > Information 25/11/2004 7:07:14 AM eventlog None > > 6005 N/A LPS-W2K > > Information 25/11/2004 7:07:14 AM eventlog None > > 6009 N/A LPS-W2K > > > > Unfortunately it all means little to me :-( > > Thank you for your interest and help. > > ========================== > > > > "John John" <audetweld@nbnet.nb.ca> wrote in message > > news:u4XWM%23c0EHA.3364@TK2MSFTNGP12.phx.gbl... > > > >>What service pack are you running on? There is an issue with drive or > > > > partition enumeration that can cause slow boot that was fixed with sp4. > > Roxio software can also cause slow boots. Any errors showing in the > > > >>Event Viewer? Paste them here maybe someone can help, without that info > > > > it's a bit like poking around in the dark. > > > >>John > >>------------------ > >>L. Peter Stacey wrote: > >> > >>>What is a reasonable time for Win 2000 to boot up? > >>>I have moved from 98SE recently to a Intel 333 PC with RAID (three HD's) > > > > and the system takes about 5 min. to boot up. I originaly thought that must > > be normal but now wonder if that is so and what/ how can I speed this up. > > > >>>Thanks for any assistance, Peter Stacey > > > > > > |
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#7 |
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Guest
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Ok, but you didn't tell me what the "Warning" on Dhcp event 1007 says.
My suspicion is that its a NIC configuration or network protocol issue that causes the long boot. Why the SNMP? Did you set that to start at boot to trap network errors or to monitor the network? Also, paste a list of the running processes (from Task Manager) when you boot the pc, there might be something to remove in there. I take it that the POST boot is relatively fast but that the Windows one is slow, right? John PS: You can enable boot logging if you want by pressing F8 when Windows starts to load and selecting the option. L. Peter Stacey wrote: > John. > > I don't need the automatic updates feature, am happy to do this manualy. > > The PC is a former server from an office enviroment but I have re-installed > W2K from scratch. My referece to "have moved from 98SE recently to a Intel > 333 PC" is just that Win 2K is a new envioroment and I am totaly unfamiliar > with it. e.g. in Win 98SE I would have used BLA.exe (Boot Log Analiser) to > analise my start up system. > > At the moment the W2K PC is cable (Lan) connected to my other PC which runs > Win 98SE. That PC (Celeron 400) was/is? My main machine but have HD problems > so am trying to recover data from it, that is why the two PC's are connected > at present. > > Thanks for your assistance. Peter Stacey > > "John John" <audetweld@nbnet.nb.ca> wrote in message > news:O9F%23cRq0EHA.2196@TK2MSFTNGP14.phx.gbl... > >>Ok... Let's start by cleaning that up a bit to see what we have here, it >>will help others help us. >> >>AppLog: >>Type Time Source Category Event >>Information 7:07:51 SceCli None 1704 >>Information 7:07:43 EvntAgnt None 2018 >>Information 7:07:40 WMDM PMSP Service None 105 >>Information 7:07:20 Avg7UpdSvc None 1 >> >>Not too much out of the usual there. SceCli can cause slow logons but >>for the time being we'll leave that aside, it's a bit of a "non event" >>in most cases and is quite normal to see in the log. >> >>Not for me to tell you how to run your pc but you should consider whether > > or not you really want WMDM PMSP Service to start automatically. It's a > Windows Media Player thing that in my opinion does next to > >>nothing other than opening security holes on your pc and consume resources > > for nothing. You could set it to "manual" start. Make sure you have the > security patches for Media Player. I'm also not a big fan > >>of "AutoUpdates" of any kind starting when I boot my pc, I AM NOT > > recommending that you turnoff your AVG Auto Update feature but you could > temporarilly turn it off to troubleshoot the slow boot, eliminate it as > >>a possible cause for now. Now for the System log... >> >>Syslog: >>Type Time Source Category Event >>Information 7:50:28 Automatic Updates Installation 17 >>Information 7:10:40 RemoteAccess None 20158 >>Warning 7:08:33 Dhcp None 1007 >>Information 7:07:45 SNMP None 1001 >>Information 7:07:14 eventlog None 6005 >>Information 7:07:14 eventlog None 6009 >> >>A few questions here. Is this box on a network? What does the "Warning" > > say on Dhcp event 17? (Right click on it the click on "Properties" and > paste the contents of the Description box). |
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#8 |
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Guest
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quoting:
> What is a reasonable time for Win 2000 to boot up? > I have moved from 98SE recently to a Intel 333 PC with RAID (three HD's) and > the system takes about 5 min. to boot up. I originaly thought that must be > normal but now wonder if that is so and what/ how can I speed this up. > > Thanks for any assistance, Peter Stacey On a AMD K62 550mhz, which is like a Pentium 2 at 233mhz - about 2 1/2 minutes from when I press the power button, to the desktop displaying and hard drive activity settles down. |
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#9 |
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Guest
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John
The Dhcp message is as follows: Your computer has automatically configured the IP address for the Network Card with network address 0000212562A6. The IP address being used is 169.254.97.242. No idea why the SNMP item is listed, not done by me deliberately. How can I copy/paste the Task manager list? Thanks for your help John. ------------------------------------------- "John John" <audetweld@nbnet.nb.ca> wrote in message news:ufHHOzz0EHA.2040@tk2msftngp13.phx.gbl... > Ok, but you didn't tell me what the "Warning" on Dhcp event 1007 says. > My suspicion is that its a NIC configuration or network protocol issue > that causes the long boot. Why the SNMP? Did you set that to start at boot to trap network errors or to monitor the network? > > Also, paste a list of the running processes (from Task Manager) when you boot the pc, there might be something to remove in there. I take it that the POST boot is relatively fast but that the Windows one is slow, right? > John > > PS: You can enable boot logging if you want by pressing F8 when Windows > starts to load and selecting the option. |
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#10 |
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Guest
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When you boot the pc it's looking for a Dhcp server for IP assignment,
as it can't find a dhcp server it uses Automatic TCP/IP Addressing and gives you the warning message (Dhcp event 1007) that it configured the NIC to an address in the reserved range 169.254.0.0 - 169.254.255.255. This might be a useful feature when setting up a network but it is unnecessary overhead on such a small network. In my opinion you might be better off manually assigning TCP/IP addresses, this would turn off Automatic addressing. Use addresses that are not in the 169.254 range something like 60.70.80.1 for one machine and 60.70.80.2 for the other would be fine. Use as few protocols as absolutely necessary. I would think that you would only need TCP/IP protocol. I can't understand why SNMP would've stuck itself as an automatic start item. I've seen print servers that sometimes ask if you want to use it for error reporting but that is about it, even if you don't enable it the print server usually runs just fine without SNMP. You could try setting SNMP to "Manual Start". I'm no expert on these matters so I hope someone else can provide more assistance for you on that subject. This article may help: How to Use Automatic TCP/IP Addressing Without a DHCP Server http://support.microsoft.com/kb/q220874/ How to copy/paste the Task manager list? That's a darn good question. I just don't know how to do it right from Task Manager but you can save it to text via compmgmt.msc. The Computer Management Console is accessible via the Control Panel "Administrative Tools" or by typing compmgmt.msc in the Start>Run dialogue box. Expand >System Information>Software Environment and click on "Running Tasks". Then from the action menu you can export or save the list as a text file. VERY IMPORTANT!!! Did you make an Emergency Repair Disk? If not make one right now! If you're going to be turning services on and off to try to get a faster boot time an ERD may come in handy if things get out of hand. John L. Peter Stacey wrote: > John > The Dhcp message is as follows: > Your computer has automatically configured the IP address for the Network > Card with network address 0000212562A6. The IP address being used is > 169.254.97.242. > > No idea why the SNMP item is listed, not done by me deliberately. > > How can I copy/paste the Task manager list? > Thanks for your help John. > ------------------------------------------- > > "John John" <audetweld@nbnet.nb.ca> wrote in message > news:ufHHOzz0EHA.2040@tk2msftngp13.phx.gbl... > >>Ok, but you didn't tell me what the "Warning" on Dhcp event 1007 says. >>My suspicion is that its a NIC configuration or network protocol issue >>that causes the long boot. Why the SNMP? Did you set that to start at > > boot to trap network errors or to monitor the network? > >>Also, paste a list of the running processes (from Task Manager) when you > > boot the pc, there might be something to remove in there. I take it that > the POST boot is relatively fast but that the Windows one is slow, right? > >>John >> >>PS: You can enable boot logging if you want by pressing F8 when Windows >>starts to load and selecting the option. > > > |
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