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My computer's been getting slower last couple of days, could it be that I've been keeping too many songs or documents? If not, can someone give me an idea why this is happening?

2006-11-08 08:14:29 · 9 answers · asked by Laura B 2 in Computers & Internet Other - Computers

9 answers

That may be the reason, but defragmenting the hard drive will help.

Right click on hard drive > Go to Tools tab > click on the Defragment Button

It may take a while with a large hard drive

2006-11-08 08:17:33 · answer #1 · answered by Wolf 2 · 0 0

Simply storing a lot of files on your hard drive will not slow it down, however the very act does have implications in certain cases. If you are around 80% full, the the normal windows paging operations (virtual memory, not physical memory) can be scattered all over the disk, which will only slow down while the drive is seeking the various clusters of data. Look at your disk light to see if the disk is being accessed a lot when you are running different applications. If not, dont worry about it too much. If so, then a simple defrag would help. Also consider getting an external hard drive to move your music to.

Now, if you have all of this music from various download services, I would offer that you caught some kind of malware. Step 1: Use an antivirus to do a boot-time scan (before windows takes over). Kill anything that looks suspicious. Step 2: Run an antispyware program (adaware or spybot) to see if they find anything. Step 3: Run the free version of winpatrol and see whats starting on its own in the background. Chances are that you have a bunch of things running that isnt really needed.

Lastly, as you keep patching windows (hopefully you are), these patches WILL slow you down somewhat, as they are plugging holes in the OS and in IE. This is the tradeoff that we all have to live with.

Hope this helps.

2006-11-08 08:27:25 · answer #2 · answered by orlandobillybob 6 · 0 0

Yes, as the hard drive gets full the system will slow down- doesn't matter if the files are music, documents or excel spreadsheets. Anti-virus and spyware scans have that many more files to check every time they run, and there's less free space for Windows to use as temporary storage. You might be able to improve things a bit be running a defrag (in case files are scattered all over different areas of the drive) but you always want at least 15% of your total hard disk space left unused.

If you've got plenty of room left, then you probably picked up some adware/spyware that's slowing you down. Run a scan with Ad-Aware, Spybot etc.

2006-11-08 08:20:08 · answer #3 · answered by C-Man 7 · 0 0

Your computing gadget will basically decelerate once you're working extra purposes at as quickly as than the quantity of reminiscence (RAM) you have can particularly accomodate. this is to declare that it's going to basically decelerate in case you're listening to song, enjoying international of Warcraft, surfing a dozen distinctive internet sites, typing an e mail, etc. all on the comparable time. The shear variety of songs you have saved on your tensecontinual would desire to have a minimum effect on the overall performance. If it turns right into a difficulty, you will desire to defragment your tensecontinual.

2016-10-21 12:05:31 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

It can to an extent, but all the information is stored on the hard drive. If you want to speed up your pc. Free up some RAM. You can remove programs off the start up that will make it run fast. Defrag your computer, like once a month, this will help it run faster also.

2006-11-08 08:18:33 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

i have a sh*tload of songs on my computer and it's not slow at all. usually if that starts happening, i'll scan it for viruses and spyware using spybot or ad aware and it takes care of the problem. you also may want to get rid of stuff you don't need or use anymore.

2006-11-08 08:18:43 · answer #6 · answered by Jenn 3 · 0 0

Chances are good that it is the sites you have been downloading your songs from that installed spyware on your PC. Follow the instructions on the following page to check if your PC is infected.

http://www.cybertopcops.com/malicious-software-removal.php

2006-11-08 08:24:55 · answer #7 · answered by cppgenius 4 · 0 0

Storing files (music or otherwise) on your hard drive, does NOTHING to slow your computer (unless you are playing them, then it will).

2006-11-08 08:26:20 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

could be that you are using up the memory. but it could also be a combination of manythings.


call the geek squad at best buy.

2006-11-08 08:17:43 · answer #9 · answered by smiles 3 · 0 1

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