System takes forever to load and fill in icons on destop WHY?

J

J Tinsby

A friend recently formatted his HD and re installed XP Pro, there are
only about 20 or less processes running. Yet when he boots up, it
takes a long time for the icons on the desktop to fill in and the
taskbar is all blue. Finally after the icons fill in, then the taskbar
starts to fill in a section at a time from left to right.

Once all this is done, he tells me the system seems to run fine and
isn't sluggish. He's run virus scanners, spyware programs SFC and
defrag etc all to no avail. He does have SP3 installed but the system
had this trouble prior to the install.

Anyone have any ideas?

Thanks in advance to all who reply!

J T
 
K

Ken Blake, MVP

A friend recently formatted his HD and re installed XP Pro, there are
only about 20 or less processes running. Yet when he boots up, it
takes a long time for the icons on the desktop to fill in and the
taskbar is all blue. Finally after the icons fill in, then the taskbar
starts to fill in a section at a time from left to right.

Once all this is done, he tells me the system seems to run fine and
isn't sluggish. He's run virus scanners, spyware programs SFC and
defrag etc all to no avail. He does have SP3 installed but the system
had this trouble prior to the install.


First, exactly how long is this "long time" you're talking about?

My personal view is that the attention many people pay to how long it
takes to boot is unwarranted. Assuming that the computer's speed is
otherwise satisfactory, it may not be worth worrying about. Most
people start their computers once a day or even less frequently. In
the overall scheme of things, even a few minutes to start up isn't
very important. Personally I power on my computer when I get up in the
morning, then go get my coffee. When I come back, it's done booting. I
don't know how long it took to boot and I don't care.

However if you do want to address it, it may be because of what
programs start automatically, and you may want to stop some of them
from starting that way. On each program you don't want to start
automatically, check its Options to see if it has the choice not to
start (make sure you actually choose the option not to run it, not
just a "don't show icon" option). Many can easily and best be stopped
that way. If that doesn't work, run MSCONFIG from the Start | Run
line, and on the Startup tab, uncheck the programs you don't want to
start automatically.

However, if I were you, I wouldn't do this just for the purpose of
running the minimum number of programs. Despite what many people tell
you, you should be concerned, not with how *many* of these programs
you run, but *which*. Some of them can hurt performance severely, but
others have no effect on performance.

Don't just stop programs from running willy-nilly. What you should do
is determine what each program is, what its value is to you, and what
the cost in performance is of its running all the time. You can get
more information about these at
http://castlecops.com/StartupList.html. If you can't find it there,
try google searches and ask about specifics here.

Once you have that information, you can make an intelligent informed
decision about what you want to keep and what you want to get rid of.
 
B

Bill in Co.

20 processes running is considered high??? Wow. I've got 40 after
bootup, and I thought I was on the LOW side. (these include the antivirus,
ad blockers, and things like that)
 
N

Nonny

20 processes running is considered high??? Wow. I've got 40 after
bootup, and I thought I was on the LOW side. (these include the antivirus,
ad blockers, and things like that)

I completely agree.

I'd gotten mine down to about 40 before I installed Vista. I
could have gotten it down to close to 20 if I ran NOTHING
that was checked in MSCONFIG and if I deleted everything in
Startup.

Note that I had about half of "services" either disabled or on
manual too.
 

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