Need help Restoring Win XP System

  • Thread starter Thread starter Jon
  • Start date Start date
J

Jon

Greetings! I have a HP that has hit the wall speedwise.
Took it to a shop and they scrubbed the system, but
problem persists. They recommend total system reinstall.
I've tried System Restore, but it hasn't helped. Can
anyone walk me through the steps to restore my system? (I
bought these two new HP's from TigerDirect and neither
was shipped with a program CD for system installation.
UGH!)

Thanks - Jon
 
just a general questiona bout the tiger direct computers
are they really good lol besides youres?
ok to do a system restore go to start-allprograms-
accesories hten find hte folder called SYSTEM TOOLS you
should see one program called SYSTEM RESTORE hit it you
are provided with too choices
1. to restore your pc to an earlier time
2. to create a restore point
you want to hit RESTORE YOURE PC TO AN EARLIER TIME when
you do this on the left you see a calender by the name of
the month you see arrows see if u can hit the left arrow
to bring to the earliest month you can find when u find
a good one hit hte date a nd pic a restore point hten
hit next twice
:)
 
Jon

Do you have a restore point predating the problem?

Poor system performance can be the result of a single problem or a
combination of factors. Listed
below are issues, which you may wish to examine if you are experiencing poor
performance after
the boot process has completed. Some items may help with slow starting of
Windows XP but the
list has not been prepared for tackling that problem. Work through the list
until you achieve an
acceptable result.

Regular and effective housekeeping is essential. What you do and how often
you do it will depend
on how you use your computer. A suggested routine may include:

1. In Outlook Express empty your Deleted Items folder.
2. In Outlook Express run File, Folder, Compact All whilst OFFLINE.
3. Run Disk Cleanup. Start, Programs, Accessories, System Tools, Disk
Cleanup with
Temporary Internet Files, Offline Web Pages (optional), and Recycle Bin
selected for
deletion. If you have more than one drive / partition you may need to do
this operation for
each drive / partition.
4. Remove Cookies. Start, Control Panel, Internet Options, General, Delete
Cookies.
5. Run Disk Defragmenter.

Check whether you could reduce the number of days the History of sites
visited is retained. Start,
Control Panel, Internet Options, General, History.

Spyware causes many problems. If not installed download Adaware and / or
update Reference file
from http://www.lavasoftusa.com/support/download/ and use it to remove
parasites. If Spyware
persists as a problem try a Hosts file.
http://www.accs-net.com/hosts/what_is_hosts.html

Slow performance resulting from insufficient memory, causing over reliance
on virtual memory,
may be especially noticed by those upgrading to Windows XP from an earlier
version of Windows.
Windows XP will run with 64 MB of RAM memory. However, a minimum of 256 MB
is
recommended and many users will recommend 512 MB. You may check on pagefile
(virtual
memory) usage with Page File Monitor for XP:

http://www.dougknox.com/

Check how much free space you have on the hard drive / partition where your
pagefile is located.
You need a minimum of 15% but 20% or more is better.

Check your setting for the Indexing Service. Start, Administrative Tools,
Services, Indexing
Service. The default setting is Manual. Check that it is not running. More
information here:
http://www.blackviper.com/WinXP/service411.htm#Indexing_Service

You can have too many programmes running in the background. Close
programmes/windows after
use. Check whether all the programmes loading when Windows is started are
really necessary.
http://aumha.org/a/loads.htm

Check whether you can identify slow performance with a particular programme.
Look in Google to
see whether others have encountered the same problem and found a solution.
http://groups.google.com/

Are there any error messages in Event Viewer? You can access Event Viewer by
selecting Start,
Administrative Tools, and Event Viewer. When researching the meaning of the
error, information
regarding Event ID: and Source Description is important.
HOW TO: View and Manage Event Logs in Event Viewer in Windows XP
http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;308427&Product=winxp

~~~~~~


Hope this helps.

Gerry
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
FCA

Stourport, Worcs, England
Enquire, plan and execute.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
Jon said:
Greetings! I have a HP that has hit the wall speedwise.
Took it to a shop and they scrubbed the system, but
problem persists. They recommend total system reinstall.
I've tried System Restore, but it hasn't helped. Can
anyone walk me through the steps to restore my system? (I
bought these two new HP's from TigerDirect and neither
was shipped with a program CD for system installation.
UGH!)

Thanks - Jon
 
Hi~I'm no expert put have put too many hours in finding info I need...hope it will help...HP doesn't provide XP disks, they instead give you System Recovery, which will take your system back to it's original state like the day you bought it. You have to back up personal files you've created, and reinstall programs you added afterward, they will all be wiped out. System Recovery is located in Start-All Programs-HP-HP pavilion tools, or something similar on your PC. Don't bother looking for lots of info, they don't tell you much.
However- If like me, you got XP Home Edition, Microsoft didn't put the Backup utility on the PCs, they are on the installation disk, which HP/Compaq doesn't give you!! I for one think this is criminal. After much research I found I can back up my personal documents, music, etc. onto a CD using the CD burning software that came on the PC. We are evidently supposed to buy a third-party backup program for more efficient, regular backups.
I called HP and got the installation disks because I wanted to have them just in case, but I'm not sure which procedure would be best to use. See my post asking that question. Best of luck to you...
 
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