Shutting down Processes

  • Thread starter Thread starter Guest
  • Start date Start date
G

Guest

Hey All

I'm trying to do some Video Capture and editing but everything seems very
slow. I want to know what processes I can temporarily shut down in the
windows Task Manager.

Dan
 
Dan

What processes are running?

How much RAM memory? Try Ctrl+Alt+Delete to bring Task Manager and
select the Performance Tab. What is the Commit Charge? What was the
Peak?


--


Hope this helps.

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

Using invalid email address

Stourport, Worcs, England
Enquire, plan and execute.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Please tell the newsgroup how any
suggested solution worked for you.



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
Daniel said:
Hey All
I'm trying to do some Video Capture and editing but everything seems
very
slow. I want to know what processes I can temporarily shut down in the
windows Task Manager.
Dan

You might also check your HD space too, and see if the drive is
fragmented, possible if u deal with a lot of large files.Run CCleaner
or the disk cleanup utility and then chkdsk and defrag the system, this
will help speed things up. If the swap file is fragmented u may need
some third party tool.
How much RAM do you have?
 
Daniel said:
Hey All

I'm trying to do some Video Capture and editing but everything seems
very slow. I want to know what processes I can temporarily shut down
in the windows Task Manager.

Dan

In addition to the good advice you got from the other posters, if you
post back please include your computer specs such as processor speed,
amount of RAM, video card make/model/RAM, hard drive space available,
and whether you ever were able to successfully edit video. Include the
name of the program you are using to edit video, too.

Malke
 
kenchi

I have 1.50 GBs of RAM. I ran a Disk defragmentation Before and after trying
to capture video.

Dan
 
I'm Running WIN XP Home SP2. I have a screen shot of all the Processes runing
on my PC. I see you can't attach files on here.

Dan
 
Back
Top