Originally posted by: Childs
Is your L2 cache enabled in the bios? Probably seems like an outdated question to ask, but this is one thing that can make a fast system ass slow.
Where in the bios do I look for that?
Originally posted by: Childs
Is your L2 cache enabled in the bios? Probably seems like an outdated question to ask, but this is one thing that can make a fast system ass slow.
Originally posted by: nags
Originally posted by: Childs
Is your L2 cache enabled in the bios? Probably seems like an outdated question to ask, but this is one thing that can make a fast system ass slow.
Where in the bios do I look for that?
Originally posted by: rh71
defrag ?
Originally posted by: istallion
Do you experience any errors, lockups, crashes? Have you stress tested your system? how?
Are there any apps that you also run when you experience slowness?
Is the disk thrashing when you experience slowness?
Check event viewer for errors.
Run msconfig and start stop everything shown in "startup", then reboot & test.
I've had bad HDDs, CD/DVD drives bring a system to a crawl. As well as Exact Audio Copy and debuggers.
Originally posted by: Allio
Not sure if this is your problem, but the latest drivers for my onboard sound (Realtek) gave me huge CPU usage when using any sort of sound at all - even leaving Winamp paused would use a constant 10-20% CPU. Killing those drivers entirely and using the ~5kb ones from Windows Update fixed the problem and I now have 0% CPU usage.
I'm fairly sure this was because the new drivers were using my CPU to emulate 3D hardware sound at all times, something I really didn't want them to do
I would try uninstalling your sound drivers and using the most basic ones you can find. Failing that, buy a $10 soundcard.
Originally posted by: skace
You most likely have a sound driver or codec issue. I'm not sure if an audio codec issue would cause massive problems with winamp though. It would cause massive problems with windows media player.
Although, random blue screens are usually related to overheating problems.
Is your L2 cache enabled in the bios? Probably seems like an outdated question to ask, but this is one thing that can make a fast system ass slow.