New
#21
Hi, I had XP running for years without any problems, it was bullet proof, then the MB went pop and fried it's self. So 2 weeks ago I bought a new PC wth Win7 home premium on it, that was the start of my troubles. I don't think a day has gone by without trouble, anyhow, some of the tips I have found which have helped are (1) remove AVG9 if installed (2) Adobe flash, disable hardware accelleration. I hope this helps you a bit.
ihatewin7
Your reaction seems close to my own when I first installed window 7 64bit. I would stick around these forums and ask a few questions. There is enough brain power here to sort things out, I'm sure. My own problems were mainly due to a crap configuration by the computer builder, and a whole load of out of date drivers. 90% sorted by these forums and my guess is, remaining problems 'might' get sorted with Service Pack 1, when it arrives.
However, I could go for a power mac, equivalent spec apart from RAID 1 + 0 would cost me around £6k Or, work at it and save £££K's, the latter option is for me. The result is, I admit, maybe not as stable as a mac, but, I have a PC work horse that can open as many apps as I want, open over 100 full res raw images at the same time in PS CS5 (just because I can ) and run Premiere CS5 as well.
Installed software: Office 2007, Adobe CS5 (full monty), Firefox, iTunes, Capture NX2. That's about it.
I suggest you have a look into the Event Viewer to see whether any unusual events were recorded. It is obvious that your system is defunct somewhere. We'll just have to find the cause and the Event Viewer is a good starting point.
Go to Start > Right click on Computer > Manage > Event Viewer - or type Event Viewer into Start/search and hit Enter
Have a look in task manager click show 'processes from all users' then click the cpu tab so it sorts by highest usage and look to see what's eating all you cpu cycles!!
Hi ihatewin7,
I failed to mention that malware is also a likely possibility. Have you run any scans recently?
Thanks,
Harvey Meale
ihatewin7.
The first add on you may want to try to disable would be the McAfee site advisor, I have had issues were my PC cpu shot up to 100%. After some investigation I pin pointed the problem at being the site advisor.
Instead of a clean install, how about disabling all non ms services and startup through msconfig just to see if it still purrs.