Slow web browsing on Windows XP machine

EULA

Senior member
Aug 13, 2004
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I'm running a speedy AMD X2 4400+, 2GB RAM on RoadRunner cable w/ Windows XP SP2; All the latest updates, etc.

Recently, I noticed web pages were taking somewhat long to load on my desktop, between 15-30 seconds.

My computer, and a wireless AP are connected to a switch, which is connected to a hardware router, which is connected to the cable modem. Using wireless on my laptop, pages load quickly, with no problems.

I ran a virus scan, AdAware, Spybot, registry cleaner, tried repairing and reinstalling IE7, deleting cache & cookies, reinstalling the NIC drivers, repairing Winsock and rebuilding the TCP/IP stack, different network cables, disabling my software firewall, and flushing the DNS cache. There's nothing odd in my HOSTS file, and I'm not using a proxy.

Download/Upload speeds aren't a problem, and as I mentioned, my laptop works just fine. I'm pretty certain the problem is with something in XP, because Opera is just as slow. PING and tracert look normal.

Safe Mode with networking DOES work fine, however.


I'm running out of solutions to try... anyone have any ideas?

Thanks in advance.
 

HermDogg

Golden Member
Jul 29, 2004
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So you're running internet explorer as the main browser? Are you using any extensions (adblocking would be my first guess) or something?
 

BigPoppa

Golden Member
Oct 9, 1999
1,930
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Maybe try running TCP optimizer? Google for it. Strange that it would work fine in safe mode with networking but not in normal mode. Possibly a service/startup item interfering?
 

law9933

Senior member
Sep 11, 2006
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Things like your AV would be off in safe mode. Norton really bogged down my mom's PC, but it slowed all PC functions.
 

EULA

Senior member
Aug 13, 2004
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I'm going to try removing Norton to see if that helps, but it's wierd that it would just start occuring...
 

EULA

Senior member
Aug 13, 2004
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Short description: Removing Norton did the trick.

At first I thought there might be a conflict between my router and desktop because I was spoofing the MAC on one of the router interfaces. After changing my MAC and restarting, Norton refused to acknowledge me as a program administrator and pretty much locked up web access all together. Using the Symantec removal tools, I was able to completely uninstall it.

Really ackward...
 

law9933

Senior member
Sep 11, 2006
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Sorry I forgot to mention the removal tool, glad you used it. Seems that the payed Brand Name AV's have have gone overboard. Just trying to disable Norton doesn't proof it's the problem. It is a comment problem at many help forums & I am on a mission to spread the word. It started when mom's PC was a snail. Free recommended AV's are AVG & Avast!
 

Noema

Platinum Member
Feb 15, 2005
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Originally posted by: EULA
Short description: Removing Norton did the trick.

At first I thought there might be a conflict between my router and desktop because I was spoofing the MAC on one of the router interfaces. After changing my MAC and restarting, Norton refused to acknowledge me as a program administrator and pretty much locked up web access all together. Using the Symantec removal tools, I was able to completely uninstall it.

Really ackward...

Yet another reason not to use Norton...

Anyway, glad you got it sorted out.
 

gtd2000

Platinum Member
Oct 22, 1999
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I'm not exactly sure where or when Norton products went wrong but I've not used them since around 2001.

I've recently been round to "have a look" at a few friends computers where they had internet connection problems and in each case - disabling Norton solved the problem...

After removing Norton and substituting with AVG Free, Adaware/Spybot and Windows Firewall everything appears to be peachy once more.

7 years ago I'd have sworn they made a good product... these days I'm sworn off them...
 

daveybrat

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Jan 31, 2000
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Norton Antivirus 2003 was the last "good" product they released. In 2004 they changed engine's and it's been all downhill since. I would never recommend a norton or mcafee product today. Kaspersky, AntiVir, AVG, Avast are much better programs. :)
 

dealmaster00

Golden Member
Apr 16, 2007
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Symantec corporate client is pretty decent - but it's expensive/hard to get if you arent at a university or workplace that buys it.