On Thu, 3 Jan 2008 10:42:00 -0800, Paulasaurus
<Paulasaurus@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote:
> As per the subject, my WinXPHome OS has become clogged and slow.
You say "clogged and slow" here, but you say "missing files/dll's" in
the subject line. Which is it? Just one? Both?
I know how you know it's slow, but tell us why you think it's
"clogged." In fact, tell us what you mean by "clogged."
What files and dlls are missing? How do you know?
> Is there a
> WinXP utility hidden somewhere which will use the installation disk to
> 'self-diagnose' any problems it may be experiencing?
> I have tried freeware Registry cleaner - RegSeeker - to do the obvious, but
> this causes a crash before it has completed it's scan.
Probably a lucky thing. All registry cleaners are scams at best. At
worst, they can completely hose your system.
I strongly suggest you avoid using any registry cleaning program. They
are *all* snake oil. Cleaning of the registry isn't needed and is
dangerous. Leave the registry alone and don't use any registry
cleaner. Despite what many people think, and what vendors of registry
cleaning software try to convince you of, having unused registry
entries doesn't really hurt you.
The risk of a serious problem caused by a registry cleaner erroneously
removing an entry you need is far greater than any potential benefit
it may have.
> I've managed to tweek
> the performance a little by turning off many of the 'visual' features XP has,
> but it's still taking an age to do many things.
Which things? How long (at least approximately) is "an age"?
> I've only got 512Mb RAM but
512MB is fine for most people running Windows XP. In general, only
those running particularly memory-hungry applications, doing things
like photo- or video-editing need more.
> this wasn't an issue previously.
> Any advice welcome...
When a system gets slower, especially if the change is fairly sudden,
one of the things you need to consider these days is the possibility
of malware infection. I don't know that that's your problem of course,
but you need to at least make sure it's not.
What anti-virus program do you run?
What anti-spyware programs do you run"
What firewall do you run?
Are they all kept up to date?
I recommend that you begin troubleshooting by going to MVP Malke's
malware removal site at
http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/page2.html#Removing_Malware and
following the instructions there.
--
Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP Windows - Shell/User
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