Vista has a background service that indexes your drive(s). The Indexing
catalogs the content on your drive so that searching is more effective. On
a new PC this indexing takes a while to complete and draws on system
resources until the catalogs are built. If this searching capability is not
a
important item for you it's possible to disable the Windows Search service.
The speed and performance will improve as the system "Learns" what
applications you use most frequently. In comparison to XP, Vista uses a
much larger amount of system memory. Using upwards of 1.0 Gigabytes
of RAM isn't unusual. There are many more System Services that run on
a Vista PC than earlier versions of Windows.
Also, Vista performs background operations such as defragmenting the
drive during idle periods and this might account for the disk accesses.
Finally, both McAfee and Norton software impacts the performance of
any PC it's installed on. Unless your Dell is one of the new Vostro units
it likely shipped with lots of Trials and extra programs that many users
won't use. It's probably a good idea to do a "De-Dell-ify" or remove the
programs using Control Panel, Programs applet.
"Lord Horus" <> wrote in message
news:927B0C37-20B4-49F7-A6F2-...
> I'm quite new to windows Vista, having just purchased a brand new laptop
> with
> the Business version pre-installed, and I'm wondering why my computer
> seems
> to be constantly - and I mean constantly - accessing the Hard Drive.
>
> The computer is performing slightly slower than I would expect of it. I
> have
> an Intel Core 2 Duo 1.8GHz, 2GB DDR2 667MHz RAM, 160GB 7200rpm hard drive,
> and a Geforce 8600GT 256mb dedicated graphics card. Installed on the
> computer
> in terms of utilities programs are Vista Business, McAfee security centre
> with the latest updates, and the pre-installed Dell Support software.
>
> However, since I have had the computer, it seems to have been constantly
> accessing the hard drive, despite the fact that only a small amount is
> used -
> I still have well over 100GB free. I have run some games, which have run
> slower that expected, and Office seems to take longer to load that it
> should.
> I have run multiple virus scans, yet detected only a couple of tracking
> cookies, all promptly eliminated.
>
> Furthermore, Task manager detects no CPU-heavy programs running, and the
> CPU
> usage itself is very good, even when running games or utility programs,
> such
> as programming software or spreadsheets. Likewise, nothing appears to be
> hogging much memory. All the same, under the performance tab, with just
> firefox and Task manager open, both cores appear to be jumping between 21%
> activity and 60% activity, whilst the Physical memory usage is staying at
> around 1.1GB usage.
>
> In summary, what is going on? Why is my hard drive constantly being
> accessed? What could be slowing down my computer? If it's a virus, how do
> I
> remove it? If it's a utility, can I disable it? I'm not particularly
> interested in real-time utilities as I operate in an extremely secure
> university network, and so the only time I really need any
> utility/antivirus
> programs is when I run them in a batch overnight on the weekend.
>
> I would be extremely grateful for any help anyone can offer. Thank you.
>
> Horus
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