Hello, My computer has been running rather slow and laggy and I have done a basic clean up as well as running AVG security scan/Windows Defender/Disk Cleanup/Disk Defragment, no virus or spyware have been found, upon looking in the Event Viewer I have found an error that occurs some 50 times in a matter of an hour, I am not sure if this is what is causing my computer to be running slow but I could not seem to resolve the problem or really find anything about it on the Internet, here is the error report.
General: The Computer Browser service depends on the Server service which failed to start because of the following error:
The dependency service or group failed to start.
Log Name: System Logged:9/8/2011 4:11:47 AM
Source: Service Control Manager Task Category: None
EventID: 7001 Keyword: Classic
Level: Error Computer: ************-HP
User: None
Op Code: Info
- System
- Provider
[ Name] Service Control Manager
[ Guid] {555908d1-a6d7-4695-8e1e-26931d2012f4}
[ EventSourceName] Service Control Manager
- EventID 7001
[ Qualifiers] 49152
Version 0
Level 2
Task 0
Opcode 0
Keywords 0x8080000000000000
- TimeCreated
[ SystemTime] 2011-09-08T09:11:47.505816600Z
EventRecordID 100932
Correlation
- Execution
[ ProcessID] 516
[ ThreadID] 1776
Channel System
Computer Bethany-HP
Security
- EventData
param1 Computer Browser
param2 Server
param3 %%1068
I Have tried this method off of Microsoft help to no avail as the WIN32_EXIT_CODE value was Zero, or I have no clue what im doin

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To review the error code:
- Click the Start button, Run, then type cmd to open a command prompt.
- Type sc query service_name (where service_name is the name of the service) at the command prompt to display the Windows WIN32_EXIT_CODE error code text that the Service Control Manager encountered when trying to start the service. Note: If the WIN32_EXIT_CODE is zero, then SCM did not attempt to start the service because the error was detected first.
- For descriptions of the Windows error codes, either see http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkID=83027, or type net helpmsg exit_code (where exit_code is the 4 digit number of the error code) at the command prompt to display the meaning of the WIN32_EXIT_CODE. For more information about the net helpmsg command, see http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=105087. For more information about the sc command, see SC Command Reference Help (http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkID=84961).
Review the related events logged by the SCM
To review the related events logged by the SCM:
- Open Event Viewer by clicking the Start button, Control Panel, and Administration Tools, then double-clicking Event Viewer. Note: For Windows Vista, use the Classic View display option in Control Panel to see the Administration Tools.
- Click Event Viewer (Local), then Windows Logs and System.
- In the details pane, click on the Source column to view the events sorted by the entity that logged that event. For events logged by the SCM, the source is the Service Control Manager Eventlog Provider.
The error message text and related events for this service should help you to further troubleshoot and resolve the issue. Some examples are provided below:
- If event ID 7011 is also logged for this service, then extending the service timeout period to resolve event ID 7011 would also resolve this error.
- If event ID 7034 is also logged for this service, then restoring the service default settings to resolve event ID 7034 would also resolve this error.
If the issue remains unresolved, contact Microsoft support and provide the error information. For information about how to contact Microsoft support, see Support Options from Microsoft Services (
http://go.microsoft.com/fwlink/?LinkId=89446).
Verify
To perform this procedure, you must have membership in
Administrators, or you must have been delegated the appropriate authority.
To verify that a service has started:
- Open the Services snap-in by clicking the Start button, Control Panel, and Administrative Tools, then double-clicking Services. Note: For Windows Vista, use the Classic View display option in Control Panel to see the Administration Tools.
- In the details pane of the Services snap-in, locate the name of the service and verify that the Status column shows a status of Started.
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I apologize for the copy and paste but it was easier, any help or advice would be greatly appreciate as well as if anyone knows if this is a serious threat or not.