Try allocating at least 1024 MB's to your page file. Control Panel > System
and Maintenance > System > Advanced System Settings. Hit the "Settings..."
button for the Performance box and go to the "Advanced" tab. Specify a
minimum and maximum. I use 3072 personally, and I run smooth as butter.
Also, be sure to maintain familiarity with your list of startup programs.
Also, It's important to defrag after any major bouts of installing or
uninstalling software. As a matter of fact as a rule of thumb, a defrag
after every movement of about 20 gigs is probably being too lax.
--
My Blog: [URL - http://dynsecks.blogspot.com/]
My System Specs:
Dell Inspiron 1520, 2GB DDR2 667 RAM, 2.2GHZ Intel Centrino C2D /w 4MB L2
Cache
160GB 7200 RPM 16MB Cache HDD, nVidia GeForce 8600M GT, Vista Home Premium
*I haven't had any issues caused by Vista that couldn't be fixed in five
minutes or less.
--
"Old DOS Sys Admin" <Old DOS Sys Admin@xxxxxx> wrote in
message news:EB8A8AD9-BB7D-40DF-8DB0-6263CA964496@xxxxxx
Quote:
>I have a 6 month old Dell XPS that shipped with Vista Premium. It is a
>dual
> processor, with 4 gigs of RAM and a 500 GB. When I first boot the
> computer
> is seems to be sluggish and if I try to use a program it will freeze. This
> happens in IE 7, video games and MS Office programs.
>
> What I have noticed is that if I let the machine run for about 5 minutes
> it
> seems fine. I have started the Task Manager and switched to the
> Performance
> Tab - as the "Cached" number gets higher the system becomes more stable -
> e.g. if I start a program as the "Cached" number is below 700 then I will
> get
> a freeze - but when "Cached" is above 1,500 then it runs smoothly.
>
> I feel like I am running an old 386! Turn it on and go make coffee!
>
> Any suggestions?