Gunbot wrote:Rick wrote:T-Bone wrote:Andrew wrote:xflajrnylvr wrote:Andrew did you enable sata in your bios?
Yeah, my HDs are mostly SATA. A bud of mine suggested over taxed pwer supply....but is there any way around that??
Find out what wattage your power supply is and go get a bigger one. Stick to name brands such as OCZ, Thermaltake, Corsair, etc...
A good one to look into would be:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.a ... 6817139001And Newegg doesn't ship to Aussieberg, so you'll have to find the same one on evilbay or somewhere
It may just be a RAM issue also.
Andrew if you have a lot of icons next to the clock down in the bottom right of the screen, you could just have more stuff running than your RAM can handle. Try shutting down some of those programs by right clicking on them and either clicking exit or going into those programs settings and selecting not to have those start when Windows does.
Don't do that to essential programs, such as antivirus.
Go to your run box, type msconfig, hit enter, go to the startup tab and see whats running. if you don't recognise the program or it doesn't show a familiar command path, uncheck it. Nero, Realplayer and all that other junk like to run on startup even though they don't need to.
I disagree. Doing any unchecking in MSCONFIG puts your computer into diagnostic mode, which is only a trouble shooting mode and should never be used to simply shut down unnecessarily running processes.
The best way to do that is by going into those programs and setting them not to run when Windows starts by default.
Also, click Start, then go to All Programs and position your mouse over the Startup folder and see what's in there and delete anything that's unnecessary by right clicking on the specific item and then click delete.
After that you edit the Run folders in the registry.
To do that, click Start, then click Run. Type in regedit and click OK. In the registry editor, click the + signs by HKEY_CURRENT_USER
scroll down to: Software and click the +
scroll down to: Microsoft and click the +
scroll down to : Windows and click the +
scroll down to : Current Version and click the +
And then click on the Run folder.
Very carefully scrutinize the programs that are listed. If you see any that are not needed when Windows starts, right click on them and select Delete.
Scroll all the way back to the top of Regedit and click the - minus sign by HKEY_CURRENT_USER. It will bring it back to the way it looked when you started.
Now, repeat the same exact process with the HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE key. Expect longer scroll downs here.
Be very careful not to delete anything that may be necessary, and do not try to edit anything other than those two 'Run' folders.
I like to sit out on the front porch, where the birds can see me, eating a plate of scrambled eggs, just so they know what I'm capable of.