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My computer is fairly new and I don't install alot of programs is it since it's strictly for work. However, just yesterday when I was restarting I noticed that it took a lot longer to shutdown then it usually does and has been that way ever since yesterday. I have AT&T/Yahoo internet and I just updated their antivirus to Norton Antivirus and Norton Firewall, and I think that was when it started to show signs of slowing down during shutdown. Could that be why it's lagging during shutdown? can you tell me why it takes so long to shutdown?

2007-10-01 05:54:49 · 10 answers · asked by bananafanafofanni 2 in Computers & Internet Software

Aside from shutdown slowly, my computer is working fine in terms of other performances like internet speed and program use so there's no worries about that.

2007-10-01 05:55:58 · update #1

10 answers

It could be Norton. It runs in the background and tries to do its work when the computer is not busy. When you shutdown it has to wrap up whatever it was doing. I would recommend that you set the Norton schedule to run at a specific day and time of your choosing.
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2007-10-01 05:59:52 · answer #1 · answered by Barkley Hound 7 · 1 0

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2016-11-06 23:00:43 · answer #2 · answered by hohl 4 · 0 0

You hit the nail on the head - having the norton software running makes your machine take longer to boot, uses up a chunk of your resources, makes it take longer to shut down too.

Solution - remove all of it. Don't click on attachments from e-mails that aren't from people you know, don't click on downloads on file sharing sites that claim to be pron flicks, movies, games, or mp3's that are only 867K (and avoid the rest whenever possible).

Don't just click 'ok' when something pops up on your screen - always read, and understand what you are clicking on.

Anything that tells you 'you need to install this for that to happen' make sure you know what it is doing, and if you don't, then doublecheck with the softwares website to make sure that it is a legitimate upgrade/patch/codec etc.

A little common sense goes a long way - if you ever do end up with a virus on your machine, despite being vigilant, then download a free virus scan, determine what you have on the machine, and then search online for instructions or a utility for removing that specific virus.

As far as software firewalls are concerned, don't bother - they actually have the opposite of the intended effect - when someone runs across a firewall, would be 'hackers' assume that there must be something on that machine worth protecting. Everytime I have ever seen one installed on someones computer - it is getting hit every couple of seconds, as opposed to a normal machine set up to sense pings/access attempts without alerting the originator - which is almost never. I determined after a while that it may just be the software generating the 'pings' to make you think it is doing something.

Your best bet is to get a router with a built in firewall - it is 1) actually effective, 2) doesn't lag your machine out, 3) can be wireless too, keeping you from having to run wires, and allowing your laptop or other wireless device to be connected anywhere in the house. Even the basic security built into a standard wireless router can be set up to be considerably more effective than any software firewall.

Once you get rid of Norton - then press ctrl+alt+del, and bring up the task manager, and switch to 'processes'.

Make a list - and then go online and search for instructions on how (and if) to remove each item. Get yourself a copy of adaware personal from lavasoft too.

2007-10-01 06:05:26 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

FYI-A fragmented drive has nothing to do with your machine taking too long to shutdown. Booting up and running, yes, defrag is a great tool, but nothing on shutdown. I agree wiht the other answer, you are probably running many programs in the background and all those files need to be closed by the os prior to a shutdown. Also, be careful when you run MSCONFIG, you don't want to stop any process that YOU think you don't need but OS does need. I would not recommend running MSCONFIG unless you know what you're doing.

2007-10-01 06:01:35 · answer #4 · answered by Richard F 3 · 1 0

Shutdown properly closes all open programs then turns the PC off.

You might want to take a look at your start menu to see what is actually running. If you want to take the start menu to bare essentials, be careful you don't remove any system files - stick to what you know you have installed.

2007-10-01 05:59:02 · answer #5 · answered by TheHumbleOne 7 · 1 0

Your laptop might be configured to clear the page file during shutdown.. You can check in the registry to see. Do a search on clearing the page file for you O/S.

2007-10-01 06:10:18 · answer #6 · answered by Drew 1 · 0 0

anti-virus softwares slow the system down(norton,mcafee etc..). AVG free anti-virus doesn't experience that problem

-don't have too many items on your desktop.
-disk cleanup
-disk defragment
-run-%temp% and del all files
-run-prefetch and del all files
- keep the room at a cool temp. if the system is overheated it'l take longer
ps: ur PC speed will increase too!!

2007-10-01 06:04:46 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

turn off the extra options in norton .quit the programs on the bottom right corner of u r screen (ms config).& dont have too many icon on u r desktop

2007-10-01 06:21:28 · answer #8 · answered by laser j 2 · 0 0

You might have a lot of BS stuff running in the background, try this. Go to start>run> type MSCONFIG, under startup uncheck anything you feel doesn't need to be running when you boot up.

2007-10-01 05:57:22 · answer #9 · answered by Zenkai 6 · 1 0

Firstly quit using nortan and use kaspersky.
Secondly defragment your computer.

2007-10-01 05:57:48 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

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