My computer freezes after normal start up
My computer freezes after normal start up at random times I am not doing anything in particular when it freezes. I have run malware bytes, SuperAntiSpyware, Avast and nothing was found, i have also ran windows defender and malicious tool removal from Microsoft. I am running Windows XP Pro. SP3. I can run the PC in safe mode and safe mode with networking but as soon as I run it in normal mode it freezes all the time. I am at my wits end trying to fix it can someone please help.1 person needs an answerI do too
February 6th, 2011 6:47pm

Hi,Try MSConfig and see if you have all the startup entries listed in order and requried ones only!. You can remove the unwanted entries in the list maybe creating the delay.. Refer:http://www.howtogeek.com/howto/windows/quickly-remove-items-from-windows-xp-startup/ andhttp://support.microsoft.com/kb/310560. Hope this helps.
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February 6th, 2011 6:56pm

Have a look in the System and Application logs in Event Viewer for Errors and Warnings and post copies here. Don't post any from than more than 48 hours ago. You can access Event Viewer by selecting Start, Control Panel, Administrative Tools, and Event Viewer. When researching the meaning of the error, information regarding Event ID, Source and Description are important. A tip for posting copies of Error Reports! Run Event Viewer and double click on the error you want to copy. You will see a button resembling two pages. Click the button and close Event Viewer. This places a copy of the report into your Clipboard. Paste into the body your message. Make sure that this is the first paste after exiting from Event Viewer.Hope this helps, Gerry Cornell
February 6th, 2011 7:26pm

What is the CPU and how much RAM does your computer have? Right click on the My Computer icon on your Desktop and select Properties to get this information. Try Ctrl+Alt+Delete to select Task Manager and click the Performance Tab. Under Commit Charge what is the Total, the Limit and the Peak? Select Start, Run, type cmd and press ENTER. Type "chkdsk c: /f /r" without the quotes and hit ENTER. Make sure you include the spaces indicated. Enter Y when asked whether you wish to run chkdsk on restarting the computer. Exit and restart the computer. Marking off bad sectors on a hard drive takes time so be patient. Marking off does not repair a bad sector. It places pointers on the drive telling the system not to read or write to those sectors which have been damaged. If the number of bad sectors continues to increase after you have run the procedure above several times then you should replace the drive. If an important system file is written to a bad sector you can corrupt registry hives and lose the whole contents of the drive. On the other hand if having run chkdsk you see no more new bad sectors then the drive can work for you for years. It is always sensible in this situation to run a check for malware Download and install Malwarebytes (freeware version for home users only), update definitions and run in safe mode. Disable other security software whilst you are doing scans.http://www.malwarebytes.org/ Download and run SuperAntiSpyware (Free Edition)http://www.superantispyware.com/download.htmlHope this helps, Gerry Cornell
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February 15th, 2011 12:46pm

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