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When your computer makes growling noises, that's obviously not good. But what does it mean? Well, that depends on how persistent that growling is. The suggestions below address the most likely cause for a given persistency.
Growls constantly....
What is probably happening |
What to do |
Not enough RAM, or memory being used up by utilities and other terminate-and-stay resident programs. |
Add RAM, and/or shut these programs off and remove them from your startup folder. |
Computer growls for a short time....
What is probably happening |
What to do |
Third party utilities are running their sensors |
Extend sensor times. You can also shut those utilities off. You probably don't need them at all. |
Computer growls for a long time....
What is probably happening |
What to do |
Fastfind is on |
Shut Fastfind off, and remove it from your hard drive. In the big picture, it actually slows you down. You are better off using normal find speed, which is almost as fast, and not having your computer bogged down with constantly building an index you'll hardly use. |
Hard drive growls, stutters; computer stops for a while....
What is probably happening |
What to do |
Pagefile too small |
Set pagefile to at least 2 x your RAM, place it in its own partition or on its own drive if you can. Make sure you don't let Windows manage your pagefile--this results in a fragmented file that costs you a great deal of speed and reduces the life of your hard drive. |
Suppose it's not your computer. What if it's:
Computer Resource Quicklinks
Working the Windows DesktopThe whole desktop approach ignores the fact that a computer's hard drive(s) are the electronic version of a paper filing cabinet. It also ignores the fact that people store a huge amount of files in that system. And it ignores a few dozen other facts relevant to using a computer. It's just a bad approach. The desktop assumes you don't care what files you actually work on. It opens apps, not files, and this is the pathway to problems. You can inadvertently be revising the wrong thing, if you can even find it in the first place. What you should do instead is use Windows Explorer. Microsoft tends to hide this, but it should be your standard interface with your computer, unless you don't mind working blind. You can always right mouse click the Start button to invoke it, but you should add Windows Explorer to your Quick Launch bar and several other menus in Windows. The default settings for Windows Explorer defy logic. Change these so you can actually see what files you are looking at. Enable it to show you the file extensions (unclick the insane "Hide extensions" box that is, stupidly enough, checked by default though actually there is never any reason to ever check this box). Select the option to show details. Now, you will be able to see your file size, file date, and other useful information. If you right click around a bit, you can find quite a bit of functionality in Windows Explorer. If you haven't been using this interface previously, make a point of using it now. If you always open files from within Windows Explorer, you will always be able to see all available files and select the right one. Use Windows Explorer to set up your filing system as if it's a paper filing cabinet. Save all files either on the data drive (dual hard drive machine) or in a folder on a single hard drive machine. Do NOT save files to the default locations. These never make any sense. They are typically within your applications, which is a dumb place to save them. That's how you end up with corrupted data files and it also makes file backups difficult. For single-drive users, an easy solution is to create a folder called 0files as your top-level data folder. The zero means it will show up at the top of your file list, making things easy for you. Below this folder, create you filing structure. Never store anything at the root of this folder. Think of it as the shell of a five-drawer filing cabinet and don't toss stuff in the bottom. Always put files in folders that are in drawers. With a good filing structure in place, you will always be able to find your files by simply clicking right to them. So think this out as you go and follow a good taxonomy. It's a much more effective way to work than how the zombies at Microsoft envision people working.
Recovering hard drive spaceEven with today's huge drives, people sometimes run out of hard drive space. The steps below can recover wasted space.
There are other steps you can take, but if, at this point, you are still low on disk space you really need to add another hard drive or upgrade one that's in your system. Or, another very cool option, is to add a My Ditto system. See our Review of the Dane my Ditto network server. |
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