Solved Computer slow...hardware...what are my options?

I gave you how to check RAM capacity and slot availability earlier, short of looking at the mobo specs which are often hard to find on OEM's like Lenovo. Crucial System Scanner software to find out what type of memory is in your computer

Just used your suggested tool.. thanks for link.

What does it report? You can Print it from the browser File tab to XPS viewer, save File on Desktop, then attach it to your post using the Paper clip in Reply box. Screenshots and Files - Upload and Post in Seven Forums - Windows 7 Forums
 
Fun fact. Talk about aknowledged forum users! A guy with more than 700 posts recommends to a "MSVCR80.DLL missing" thread that she should go and download that DLL from some website hehe, after I had already provided links to the most up-to-date installers for the Visual C++ runtimes (not only 2005, and all with SP1) from Microsoft.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
DELL
OS
Windows 7 Home Premium SP1 32bit
CPU
E2220
Memory
2GB
Graphics Card(s)
Geforce 9500 GS
Hard Drives
Western Digital Blue Caviar 80GB
Antivirus
None
Browser
Pale Moon
What does it report?
Here is a link to the results page: Memory upgrades from Crucial.com - Determine My Memory Needs

Looks like is can accept some RAM.

What I need to find out is if the processor can be upgraded. Or, as @MellonHead said, Lenova may prevent that.

Back to part of the original question. If I want the computer to handle two (3 would be amazing), is that a graphics card issue?

P.S. Looks like when it was built, it was indeed 64 bit w/ 2 gigs of RAM... Isn't that what you guys are say is complete crappola? http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16883108456
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Lenovo H405 10059
OS
64 bit Windows 7
CPU
AMD Athlon II X2 255
Motherboard
LENOVO Tilapia CRB
Memory
4.00GB Dual-Channel DDR3 @ 533MHz (8-8-8-20)
Graphics Card(s)
Radeon 3000 Graphics
Monitor(s) Displays
AOC F22 (1440x900@75Hz)
Hard Drives
465GB Seagate ST3500418AS ATA Device (SATA)
Antivirus
Microsoft Security Essentials
Browser
Chrome, Firefox, IE, Safari
Other Info
PLDS DVD-RW DH16ABSH ATA Device
Yes, it is a graphics chips issue - not all are capable of three simultaneous display output. I've seen even integrated graphics chips that allow that (it's mentioned on the motherboard description), so they may not be that uncommon. I've never used more than two monitors, but newer graphics cards shouldn't have a problem with that, I think. Well the ones who sell them should know, for sure.

EDIT: I've seen discussion regarding that it was a problem with older video cards (on the TomsHardware forum) pretty often - even if the cards had three video ouputs, they had problems practically, or with drivers, etc. But then they said it was taken care of more recently and even AMD boards are good. In practice however, the resolution you use matters as well and it may prove too much (but then again, it shouldn't be a problem anymore nowadays, especially with dual video cards). It helps that you won't be playing games to stress the video cards even harder. I hear that the pixel output limitations (in terms of total resolution) is tied to the RAMDAC frequency, but I'm not that technical either. Anyway, you should be able to find forums specifically targeted towards multi-monitor configurations that should help you with more relevant information.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
DELL
OS
Windows 7 Home Premium SP1 32bit
CPU
E2220
Memory
2GB
Graphics Card(s)
Geforce 9500 GS
Hard Drives
Western Digital Blue Caviar 80GB
Antivirus
None
Browser
Pale Moon
P.S. Looks like when it was built, it was indeed 64 bit w/ 2 gigs of RAM... Isn't that what you guys are say is complete crappola? lenovo Athlon II X2 2GB DDR3 500GB HDD Capacity Desktop PC Windows 7 Home Premium 64 bit H405 (7723-1AU) - Newegg.com

Yes. The only reason I can think of is that maybe Lenovo sells (edit: more) to companies, which are more concerned with security. And 64 bit apparently has some security advantages (for example one can't install unsigned drivers which means less potential security vulnerabilities and maybe more stability but can prove stressful if you own such a device, with uncertified drivers that is, which was the case with several software and device drivers I've needed along the years, but not that often indeed - because you simply won't be able to use them). There are drivers for Windows 7 32-bit and even XP on the official support webpage of your PC however, so they are well supported!
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
DELL
OS
Windows 7 Home Premium SP1 32bit
CPU
E2220
Memory
2GB
Graphics Card(s)
Geforce 9500 GS
Hard Drives
Western Digital Blue Caviar 80GB
Antivirus
None
Browser
Pale Moon
By the way, I realize it may sound funny (Windows XP is no longer supported by Microsoft, except security updates, which are due in not a long while too), but Windows XP is actually a viable option and would make the most of the limited amount of RAM, temporarily. (For example if you choose to use separate PCs like I suggested).
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
DELL
OS
Windows 7 Home Premium SP1 32bit
CPU
E2220
Memory
2GB
Graphics Card(s)
Geforce 9500 GS
Hard Drives
Western Digital Blue Caviar 80GB
Antivirus
None
Browser
Pale Moon
Good info...thanks. Ill be curious to see what Lenovo says about ability of upgrading of the processor.

In the image below I shut down the security camera software of which can readily be seen by the drop in CPU usage and memory.

Question: Does each of the 2 upper boxes represent a "core" ? Or just that there are two AMD Athlon II 's installed?

cores.png
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Lenovo H405 10059
OS
64 bit Windows 7
CPU
AMD Athlon II X2 255
Motherboard
LENOVO Tilapia CRB
Memory
4.00GB Dual-Channel DDR3 @ 533MHz (8-8-8-20)
Graphics Card(s)
Radeon 3000 Graphics
Monitor(s) Displays
AOC F22 (1440x900@75Hz)
Hard Drives
465GB Seagate ST3500418AS ATA Device (SATA)
Antivirus
Microsoft Security Essentials
Browser
Chrome, Firefox, IE, Safari
Other Info
PLDS DVD-RW DH16ABSH ATA Device
Yes, those are core threads. There are however cores that are split themselves in two threads, so a single core will appear as two (Intel calls this hyper-threading, I'm not sure what AMD calls it), and some dual-core will appear as 4, etc. EDIT This information will appear in the System Information properties panel, along the model and frequency of the CPU (the window that you included in a previous screenshot), if that's the case with a CPU. Obviously, your CPU is true dual-core, indicated by the "X2" in the name.

Running a Windows 7 system with only 2 GB RAM is a bad idea. I know that first-hand. EDIT Especially 64-bit.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
DELL
OS
Windows 7 Home Premium SP1 32bit
CPU
E2220
Memory
2GB
Graphics Card(s)
Geforce 9500 GS
Hard Drives
Western Digital Blue Caviar 80GB
Antivirus
None
Browser
Pale Moon
I've edited more detail into my previous comment. My system is pretty heavily used (I run Visual Studio on it, and I have a lot of small tasks in the background all the time, including an e-mail checker which I see you have too, and a file server) and it only uses a little less than 1 GB of RAM, so you probably still have a lot of programs running. I've even used Firefox (Pale Moon) extensively for several hours... and that alone uses more than 400 MB of the physical RAM... Admittedly, I also get into the 1.5 GB pretty often when I go over the board with too many tabs and apps open, etc., and there is apparently nothing wrong with other processes you have running as far as I can tell from your screenshot.

EDIT I see that google drive is another hog of memory at least. There are better options for sure regarding online storage for backup purposes.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
DELL
OS
Windows 7 Home Premium SP1 32bit
CPU
E2220
Memory
2GB
Graphics Card(s)
Geforce 9500 GS
Hard Drives
Western Digital Blue Caviar 80GB
Antivirus
None
Browser
Pale Moon
I'd buy the 2gb Crucial RAM stick for $27: 2GB, 240-pin DIMM, DDR3 PC3-10600 upgrades for Lenovo H405 (7723) Desktop/PC, CT1935206 from Crucial.com. They guarantee it based on their scan.

Googling all of the specs you can find it for less but it takes close comparison to match exactly. Many warn buyers away from eBay but sellers must abide by PayPal's refund policy and give your money back if you pay to ship the piece back.

Thank you. This has been a great learning experience in such a short period of time! I think I'll grab that stick of RAM and see how that goes.

As far as Google Drive @bitoolean, that's mostly to keep my files synced between different computers, tablet and phone; Hugely convenient. I use carbonate for cloud based backing up.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Lenovo H405 10059
OS
64 bit Windows 7
CPU
AMD Athlon II X2 255
Motherboard
LENOVO Tilapia CRB
Memory
4.00GB Dual-Channel DDR3 @ 533MHz (8-8-8-20)
Graphics Card(s)
Radeon 3000 Graphics
Monitor(s) Displays
AOC F22 (1440x900@75Hz)
Hard Drives
465GB Seagate ST3500418AS ATA Device (SATA)
Antivirus
Microsoft Security Essentials
Browser
Chrome, Firefox, IE, Safari
Other Info
PLDS DVD-RW DH16ABSH ATA Device
Well apparently one of the two slots is available. That's very good. Optimum is to buy a stick of the same frequency (MHz, or you can identify that by the PC3-10600 number which just means DDR3 at 1333 MHz) and quantity (2GB) as the one you already have, indeed. Otherwise (you buy a faster one) it will down-speed or (you buy a slower one) the one you already have will down-speed. If you do that, it will make it possible for them to work in tandem (dual channel) which is a plus (programs load to the memory faster because of double bandwidth). There's no absolute need to buy Crucial - any other maker does just as fine, but that's what I would choose too if the prices did't differ too much. Otherwise, when it comes to RAM, choice doesn't matter too much (they fail more rarely than other components, although for some reason I've seen it happen more often lately). This is just my opinion from my experience using RAM, I'm not trying to contradict greg, in fact just completing his answer. EDIT: Don't expect a significant boost of performance, just getting rid of a little bottleneck. Like, now the PC will be in a rather decent condition.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
DELL
OS
Windows 7 Home Premium SP1 32bit
CPU
E2220
Memory
2GB
Graphics Card(s)
Geforce 9500 GS
Hard Drives
Western Digital Blue Caviar 80GB
Antivirus
None
Browser
Pale Moon
Well apparently one of the two slots is available. That's very good. Optimum is to buy a stick of the same frequency (MHz, or you can identify that by the PC3-10600 number which just means DDR3 at 1333 MHz) and quantity (2GB) as the one you already have, indeed. Otherwise (you buy a faster one) it will down-speed or (you buy a slower one) the one you already have will down-speed. If you do that, it will make it possible for them to work in tandem (dual channel) which is a plus (programs load to the memory faster because of double bandwidth). There's no absolute need to buy Crucial - any other maker does just as fine, but that's what I would choose too if the prices did't differ too much. Otherwise, when it comes to RAM, choice doesn't matter too much (they fail more rarely than other components, although for some reason I've seen it happen more often lately). This is just my opinion from my experience using RAM, I'm not trying to contradict greg, in fact just completing his answer. EDIT: Don't expect a significant boost of performance, just getting rid of a little bottleneck. Like, now the PC will be in a rather decent condition.

On further inspection of the computers profile, the memory info reads:

Memory:
DDR3 PC3-10600, DDR3 PC3-12800
Memory Type: DDR3 PC3-10600, DDR3 PC3-12800, DDR3 (non-ECC)

I just bought 2 gigs of the 10600. What the hell is the 12800 ??? ://
 
Last edited:

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Lenovo H405 10059
OS
64 bit Windows 7
CPU
AMD Athlon II X2 255
Motherboard
LENOVO Tilapia CRB
Memory
4.00GB Dual-Channel DDR3 @ 533MHz (8-8-8-20)
Graphics Card(s)
Radeon 3000 Graphics
Monitor(s) Displays
AOC F22 (1440x900@75Hz)
Hard Drives
465GB Seagate ST3500418AS ATA Device (SATA)
Antivirus
Microsoft Security Essentials
Browser
Chrome, Firefox, IE, Safari
Other Info
PLDS DVD-RW DH16ABSH ATA Device
What memory info is that? Of the memory stick you have, or the memory frequencies the motherboard supports? You need to find out what frequency your RAM stick is, and use another one of the same type. Anyway, don't worry, they adjust to each-other's speed if they differ (to whichever is the lower one, but to the maximum the computer - that is the motherboard and the CPU - supports). My first impression from that amalgamated data is that the stick you have is PC3-10600 (DDR3 1333 MHz) and that the motherboard supports maximum PC3-12800 (that probably stands for DDR3 1600 MHz), but I can't be sure since those numbers have no label. You should check the frequency of the RAM stick you already have, using Speccy or another software, as I said before. It doesn't feel right that two frequencies are specified on the same line. Those are most probably just what the motherboards supports, which it's normal to be more than one.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
DELL
OS
Windows 7 Home Premium SP1 32bit
CPU
E2220
Memory
2GB
Graphics Card(s)
Geforce 9500 GS
Hard Drives
Western Digital Blue Caviar 80GB
Antivirus
None
Browser
Pale Moon
What memory info is that? Of the memory stick you have, or the memory frequencies the motherboard supports? You need to find out what frequency your RAM stick is, and use another one of the same type. Anyway, don't worry, they adjust to each-other's speed if they differ (to whichever is the lower one, but to the maximum the computer - that is the motherboard and the CPU - supports). My first impression from that amalgamated data is that the stick you have is PC3-10600 (DDR3 1333 MHz) and that the motherboard supports maximum PC3-12800 (that probably stands for DDR3 1600 MHz), but I can't be sure since those numbers have no label. You should check the frequency of the RAM stick you already have, using Speccy or another software, as I said before. It doesn't feel right that two frequencies are specified on the same line. Those are most probably just what the motherboards supports, which it's normal to be more than one.

Just used Speccy... impressive user experience. :) Also, I just got off chat with a Crucial and the rep said that my current ram is actually PC3-8500.

Anyway, I just purchased 4 gigs of PC3-10600 and will pull the old stuff out so there's no downclocking.

Cheers!
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Lenovo H405 10059
OS
64 bit Windows 7
CPU
AMD Athlon II X2 255
Motherboard
LENOVO Tilapia CRB
Memory
4.00GB Dual-Channel DDR3 @ 533MHz (8-8-8-20)
Graphics Card(s)
Radeon 3000 Graphics
Monitor(s) Displays
AOC F22 (1440x900@75Hz)
Hard Drives
465GB Seagate ST3500418AS ATA Device (SATA)
Antivirus
Microsoft Security Essentials
Browser
Chrome, Firefox, IE, Safari
Other Info
PLDS DVD-RW DH16ABSH ATA Device
I DID mention in my previous message that the memory speed is limited by the maximum frequencies supported by both the CPU and motherboard. Unfortunately it seems that your CPU only supports PC3-8500 (DDR3-1066 MHz) maximum memory frequency, so any memory used with it will downgrade to PC3-8500 anyway. So in fact the RAM stick that you already had is a PC3-10600 (DDR3-1333) as well (at least according to the PC info on newegg), just that it works at a lower speed because of the CPU, so it appears as a PC-8500 to system information software.

From my online findings, your CPU socket on the motherboard is AM3 (not "AM3+"). If you happen to replace that (otherwise pretty sweet, at least a couple of years ago it was) dual-core (X2) CPU with one with more bandwidth (Front Speed Bus frequency), the RAM sticks will work at their full potential (unless the motherboard's memory speed limit is also 1066 MHz, which is probably not the case). Such CPUs for your socket are any X3 - 450/455/460 (those are triple core) or one of the quad cores X4 640 / 645 - the higher the model numbers, the higher their frequency - if you can still find those (maybe on ebay, I don't know). Otherwise, from what I could tell from online benchmarks a couple of years ago, there isn't much performance benefit between 1066 and 1333 MHz RAM anyway.

The reason the Crucial app/website (and greg) initially pointed you to a faster RAM is probably that 1066 MHz RAM sticks are no longer on sale, most probably, so they gave you a compatible one instead.

Besides being of same capacity, for two memory sticks to work in dual-channel it's also recommended that they are as similar as possible (have the same latency timings, be from the same manufacturer, and preferably even the same factory lot) but that's mostly commercial mambo-jumbo in my opinion and even different latency RAM sticks should work together. However, you can at least rest easy you didn't spend the money on the second stick completely uselessly and maybe it could also be considered an excuse for the Crucial employees to have recommended that buy.

Speaking of Speccy, you can verify the temperatures of some components with it, so for example you current CPU's maximum temperature ceiling is 74 degrees Celsius. You can check that when the PC is worked hard, and if it ever reaches 75 for prolonged times (say, more than a minute or two at most), you know you need to worry about overheating. I thought I'd share that with you since I stumbled on the information online.

Another thing in Speccy related to your PC, if the "Graphics" is recognized as "Radeon (HD) 3000" (which is the default video chip for your PC, integrated into the motherboard), then you probably don't already have a dedicated video card, and that integrated chip is only good for dual monitor configurations. But it's definitely good for that at least, according to the AMD website.
 
Last edited:

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
DELL
OS
Windows 7 Home Premium SP1 32bit
CPU
E2220
Memory
2GB
Graphics Card(s)
Geforce 9500 GS
Hard Drives
Western Digital Blue Caviar 80GB
Antivirus
None
Browser
Pale Moon
I DID mention in my previous message that the memory speed is limited by the maximum frequencies supported by both the CPU and motherboard. Unfortunately it seems that your CPU only supports PC3-8500 (DDR3-1066 MHz) maximum memory frequency, so any memory used with it will downgrade to PC3-8500 anyway.

Well shi! . Guess I forgot about checking to see what my CPU and mobo limits were considering frequency. ://

I see from online findings that your CPU socket on the motherboard is AM3, without a plus. If you happen to replace that (otherwise pretty sweet, at least a couple of years ago it was) dual-core (X2) CPU with one with more bandwidth (Front Speed Bus frequency), the RAM sticks will work at their full potential (unless the motherboard's memory speed limit is also 1066 MHz, which is probably not the case).

I have no idea what the motherboards speed limit is.

1066 MHz RAM sticks are no longer on sale, most probably, so they gave you a compatible one instead.

hmmm... will be interesting to see what the sole me when they show up.

Speaking of Speccy, you can verify the temperatures of some components with it, so for example you current CPU's maximum temperature ceiling is 74 degrees Celsius. You can check that when the PC is worked hard, and if it ever reaches 75 for prolonged times (say, more than a minute or two at most), you know you need to worry about overheating. I thought I'd share that with you since I stumbled on the information online.

Good to know! Here is a link to the Speccy data for my Lenovo: http://speccy.piriform.com/results/mgGMkRh47Eq0Bkg7clb54AB

Another thing in Speccy related to your PC, if the "Graphics" is recognized as "Radeon (HD) 3000" (which is the default video chip for your PC, integrated into the motherboard), then you probably don't already have a dedicated video card, and that integrated chip is only good for dual monitor configurations. But it's definitely good for that at least, according to the AMD website.

I'd definitely be ok with 2 monitors at this point. I just didn't see a slot on back for an additional monitor...maybe I can use the HDMI port?
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Lenovo H405 10059
OS
64 bit Windows 7
CPU
AMD Athlon II X2 255
Motherboard
LENOVO Tilapia CRB
Memory
4.00GB Dual-Channel DDR3 @ 533MHz (8-8-8-20)
Graphics Card(s)
Radeon 3000 Graphics
Monitor(s) Displays
AOC F22 (1440x900@75Hz)
Hard Drives
465GB Seagate ST3500418AS ATA Device (SATA)
Antivirus
Microsoft Security Essentials
Browser
Chrome, Firefox, IE, Safari
Other Info
PLDS DVD-RW DH16ABSH ATA Device
I'd definitely be ok with 2 monitors at this point. I just didn't see a slot on back for an additional monitor...maybe I can use the HDMI port?

I've never used one before, but yes, you should be able to. Or if you don't have a HDMI-cable monitor, you will probably find converters (or cable adapters or whatever they're called) to DVI or what you need.

The driver application that comes with the driver software for the video chip Radeon HD 3000 (provided it is installed) should activate automatically when you start the computer with two connected monitors and guide you to set them up however you want (mirror will show the same image on both, split will behave as two desktops and the third option is to spread a single desktop on the monitors as if they were one big screen). I'm not sure what the exact options are named, but you'll figure it out. If the app doesn't automatically start, you'll find the AMD Radeon settings in the control panel surely (I think their app is called Catalyst).

Another thing that will happen when you first start your PC after you put the new RAM sticks in place of the old one is probably that you will get a message from the BIOS (black screen before Windows even loads) alerting you that memory amount has changed. You just need to acknowledge that by pressing some button.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
DELL
OS
Windows 7 Home Premium SP1 32bit
CPU
E2220
Memory
2GB
Graphics Card(s)
Geforce 9500 GS
Hard Drives
Western Digital Blue Caviar 80GB
Antivirus
None
Browser
Pale Moon
From the Speccy output, your motherboard accepts PC3-10700 maximum, so if you ever replace the CPU with another AM3 one with more cores, the memory should also work as 1333 MHz. And just out of curiosity - your current RAM's latency is 7.

EDIT: Multi-core is beneficial for running more simultaneous critical (heavyweight) processes and having more cores will turn out even better performing with time, as technology evolves and more and more software developers make use of it in their apps.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
DELL
OS
Windows 7 Home Premium SP1 32bit
CPU
E2220
Memory
2GB
Graphics Card(s)
Geforce 9500 GS
Hard Drives
Western Digital Blue Caviar 80GB
Antivirus
None
Browser
Pale Moon
Hehe I see that great minds think alike. I have User Account Control disabled as well. Cheers!

EDIT: But you lied about not having an active antivirus. You do. It's Microsoft Security Essentials. You probably installed it along with other things in the suite or something.
 

My Computer My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
DELL
OS
Windows 7 Home Premium SP1 32bit
CPU
E2220
Memory
2GB
Graphics Card(s)
Geforce 9500 GS
Hard Drives
Western Digital Blue Caviar 80GB
Antivirus
None
Browser
Pale Moon
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