Why your computer runs slowly

i_should_coco

Wammer
Wammer
Sep 21, 2006
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Cruft Force 0. Virgin. Description: The "Connect to the Internet" shortcut is still on the desktop, and the "How to use Windows" dialog appears at logon. Menu animations and the various event-based sound effects — even the dreaded Microsoft Sound — seem cheerful and amusing. Likewise, a clandestine installation of the Blue Screen Of Death screensaver (complete with simulated reboot, natch) from the Sysinternals web site is hilarious. Compilers run crisply, and report only sensible, easily resolved errors. There are just nine directories off C:.

Filled with the enthusiasm that goes with having a brand new machine, the user resolves to stick to the new-fangled security-conscious temp directory buried deep somewhere below Documents and Settings.

Cruft Force 1. New. Description: User has taken time to rename cutesy desktop icons incorporating the first person singular possessive pronoun.

Twice, the mouse cursor has done that poltergeist trick where, with the actual mouse stationary, it drifts three inches due east and then stops. For no reason at all. Works fine afterwards though. Brrrrrrr.

Cruft Force 2. Comfortable. Description: User has now got around to resetting Explorer so that "web content in folders" is suppressed. Something has made a C:TEMP directory in the proper place unasked, for which mercy the user guiltily feels grateful.

A strange entry is found in the System event log: MRxSmb: The redirector was unable to initialise security context or query context attributes. Assiduous googling of the key phrases, up web site and down newsgroup, establishes that, although many have wondered, nobody knows what this means.

Cruft Force 3. Lived-in. Description: One time in seven when the user starts Word or other Office 2000 app, instead of running, it pretends it is installing itself for the first time and starts a setup program.

Directory count in C: up to 17, and something has pooed a Paradox lock control file there, too.

Cruft Force 4. Middle-aged. Description: Amount of time from screen showing "real" Windows background to the logon box appearing is >30 seconds. Sometimes cannot "browse" other machines on LAN.

Get first real BSOD. Uninstall jokey screen saver, replace with SETI.

An extra disk of huge capacity has been installed. CD-ROM moves from drive F: to drive [:

Cruft Force 5. Worn out. Description: Some time after bootup, always get a dialog "A service has failed to start - BLT300." What is BLT300? Nobody knows. Although one can manually remove/disable this service, it always reappears two or three reboots later.

If one double-clicks a document icon, Word takes 4 minutes 30 seconds to start up. But it still works fine if started as a program. Somebody opines that this is due to misconfigured DDE. Or the Mars-Jupiter cusp.

Cruft Force 6. Limping. Description: [Delphi|Visual Basic|Java] suddenly remembers a trial shareware component — deleted six months ago because it was rubbish — and refuses to compile anything until it is reinstated.

"Web content in folders" Explorer setting switches itself back on unbidden. "Setup" programs start crashing while unpacking their own decompression DLLs.

Cruft Force 7. Wounded. Description: No longer able to logon using original account as the system freezes, so must logon as "Verity2" or similar.

There are now nine items in BOOT.INI: the original W2K starter, a brace of two-entries-each NT4s (one Turkish), a Windows 98, and three assorted Linuxen. Left to start up by itself, the machine chooses a broken installation of SUSE and halts with a kernel panic.

Cruft Force 8. Decrepit. Description: A virus checker is installed at the insistence of IT. This actually improves performance, apparently violating Newton's laws.

Blue Screens Of Death are served daily. The SETI screen saver, like ET himself, encounters difficulty calling home and despairing during an overnight run creates 312 copies of its icon in an (impressively expanded) system tray that fills half the screen.

Successful connections to the LAN are very rare.

Cruft Force 9. Putrefaction. Description: Can only see the 32-GB D: partition — the one which has all the source code on it — at every third boot. Directory count in C: up to 93, partly because some [one/thing] has put a complete (but non-working) installation of the Eudora e-mail client in the root.

Starting Control Panel shows rolling torch animation. The applet icons never appear.

Cruft Force 10. Expiry. Description: Machine only runs in Safe mode at 16-color 800×600, and even then for about a minute and a half before BSODing. Attempts to start an app are rewarded with a dialog "No font list found."

Ordinary dodges, such as reformatting the hard disk(s) and starting again, are ineffective. Cruft has soaked into the very fabric of the machine, and it should be disposed of safely at a government-approved facility. There it will be encased in cruft-resistant glass and buried in a residential district.

© Verity Stob

original link here: http://www.ddj.com/184405140

Edit: Arrggh! Wrong forum.... mods pls. move to computers or whatever.

 

horace

Not allowed near the classifieds while drunk
Wammer
Dec 4, 2006
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Morpeth (Northum)
AKA
Martin
HiFi Trade?
  1. No
i_should_coco wrote:

Cruft Force 0. Virgin. Description: The "Connect to the Internet" shortcut is still on the desktop, and the "How to use Windows" dialog appears at logon. Menu animations and the various event-based sound effects — even the dreaded Microsoft Sound — seem cheerful and amusing. Likewise, a clandestine installation of the Blue Screen Of Death screensaver (complete with simulated reboot, natch) from the Sysinternals web site is hilarious. Compilers run crisply, and report only sensible, easily resolved errors. There are just nine directories off C:. Filled with the enthusiasm that goes with having a brand new machine, the user resolves to stick to the new-fangled security-conscious temp directory buried deep somewhere below Documents and Settings.

Cruft Force 1. New. Description: User has taken time to rename cutesy desktop icons incorporating the first person singular possessive pronoun.

Twice, the mouse cursor has done that poltergeist trick where, with the actual mouse stationary, it drifts three inches due east and then stops. For no reason at all. Works fine afterwards though. Brrrrrrr.

Cruft Force 2. Comfortable. Description: User has now got around to resetting Explorer so that "web content in folders" is suppressed. Something has made a C:TEMP directory in the proper place unasked, for which mercy the user guiltily feels grateful.

A strange entry is found in the System event log: MRxSmb: The redirector was unable to initialise security context or query context attributes. Assiduous googling of the key phrases, up web site and down newsgroup, establishes that, although many have wondered, nobody knows what this means.

Cruft Force 3. Lived-in. Description: One time in seven when the user starts Word or other Office 2000 app, instead of running, it pretends it is installing itself for the first time and starts a setup program.

Directory count in C: up to 17, and something has pooed a Paradox lock control file there, too.

Cruft Force 4. Middle-aged. Description: Amount of time from screen showing "real" Windows background to the logon box appearing is >30 seconds. Sometimes cannot "browse" other machines on LAN.

Get first real BSOD. Uninstall jokey screen saver, replace with SETI.

An extra disk of huge capacity has been installed. CD-ROM moves from drive F: to drive [:

Cruft Force 5. Worn out. Description: Some time after bootup, always get a dialog "A service has failed to start - BLT300." What is BLT300? Nobody knows. Although one can manually remove/disable this service, it always reappears two or three reboots later.

If one double-clicks a document icon, Word takes 4 minutes 30 seconds to start up. But it still works fine if started as a program. Somebody opines that this is due to misconfigured DDE. Or the Mars-Jupiter cusp.

Cruft Force 6. Limping. Description: [Delphi|Visual Basic|Java] suddenly remembers a trial shareware component — deleted six months ago because it was rubbish — and refuses to compile anything until it is reinstated.

"Web content in folders" Explorer setting switches itself back on unbidden. "Setup" programs start crashing while unpacking their own decompression DLLs.

Cruft Force 7. Wounded. Description: No longer able to logon using original account as the system freezes, so must logon as "Verity2" or similar.

There are now nine items in BOOT.INI: the original W2K starter, a brace of two-entries-each NT4s (one Turkish), a Windows 98, and three assorted Linuxen. Left to start up by itself, the machine chooses a broken installation of SUSE and halts with a kernel panic.

Cruft Force 8. Decrepit. Description: A virus checker is installed at the insistence of IT. This actually improves performance, apparently violating Newton's laws.

Blue Screens Of Death are served daily. The SETI screen saver, like ET himself, encounters difficulty calling home and despairing during an overnight run creates 312 copies of its icon in an (impressively expanded) system tray that fills half the screen.

Successful connections to the LAN are very rare.

Cruft Force 9. Putrefaction. Description: Can only see the 32-GB D: partition — the one which has all the source code on it — at every third boot. Directory count in C: up to 93, partly because some [one/thing] has put a complete (but non-working) installation of the Eudora e-mail client in the root.

Starting Control Panel shows rolling torch animation. The applet icons never appear.

Cruft Force 10. Expiry. Description: Machine only runs in Safe mode at 16-color 800×600, and even then for about a minute and a half before BSODing. Attempts to start an app are rewarded with a dialog "No font list found."

Ordinary dodges, such as reformatting the hard disk(s) and starting again, are ineffective. Cruft has soaked into the very fabric of the machine, and it should be disposed of safely at a government-approved facility. There it will be encased in cruft-resistant glass and buried in a residential district.
At the risk of appearing as stupid asI probably am,I am scoring 9/10 on the 'Haven't a feckin clue what you're on about-ometer'.
tongue.png


Crufts is a dog show, right?

So, you have a playful puppyrunning amok in your computer?

Sorry,I know nowt about canines either. Try bribing it with a biscuit.

Whatever it is, good luck with it.

Cheers

Martin

Not very helpful,I know....

 

Arfa

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Jun 29, 2006
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Reads like This is You Life for my work computer...

Other Cruft Force Fallouts:

The opening of a results table that persistently causes all open windows to refresh as though trying to instigate epilepsy.

The inexplicable hanging of the window explorer, task bar and start menu - sometimes left long enough they work again, but often need the task killing and restarting, only to come back with slightly fewer task shelf icons...

The internal struggle for media playback. No one app can play everything, but all want to be associated with everything. Double click the video file and its pot luck between Media Player, Quicktime, Real, Winamp, VLC, WinDVD, Foobar etc. (And why does Quicktime always start up at ear deafening volume?)

 

dudywoxer

Looking for a bigger stirring stick
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sunny scunny
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colin
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Arfa wrote:

Reads like This is You Life for my work computer... Other Cruft Force Fallouts:

The opening of a results table that persistently causes all open windows to refresh as though trying to instigate epilepsy.

The inexplicable hanging of the window explorer, task bar and start menu - sometimes left long enough they work again, but often need the task killing and restarting, only to come back with slightly fewer task shelf icons...

The internal struggle for media playback. No one app can play everything, but all want to be associated with everything. Double click the video file and its pot luck between Media Player, Quicktime, Real, Winamp, VLC, WinDVD, Foobar etc. (And why does Quicktime always start up at ear deafening volume?)
Cos its a mac ap, and needs to draw attention to itself

 

smegger68

With your sister, somewhere you wouldn't like.
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Jan 18, 2006
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Sadly, my job entails fixing Windows Servers that show these problems on a daily basis. Luckily anything above Cruft force 5 is a re-image job
biggrin.png


 

Miller-8

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I'm guessing this refers to older operating systems like Windows 2000? Dont tend to get these problems with XP.

 

Geordie

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Jul 19, 2005
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Miller-8 wrote:

I'm guessing this refers to older operating systems like Windows 2000? Dont tend to get these problems with XP.
Depends who is using the computer!

I've just took a laptop off a girl this week, after I repaired it just a month ago, broken again. This time I suggest a full rebuild. Good for my wallet I tell thee.

Seriously some people just install loads of crap on their systems and it eventually ends up doing exactly as described in the OP, even in XP!

Those of us who know what we're doing can keep an install going for many months or years, but even then strange things seem to happen from time to time for no apparent reason!

 

Miller-8

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Yeah I guess so. I try not to install any dodgy software. I refuse to install Acrobat Reader too, Foxit Reader is better. I dont trust Acrobat because it takes so damn long to install and remove.

I also use CCleaner frequently, and use it to clear out all the stray ddl's every so often.

One thing I'd like to ask - Java Updates. I currently have Java updates 3, 5 and 6 on my computer. Can I remove 3 and 5 or are they still needed?

 

Geordie

Wammer
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Good call on foxit reader, much prefer it to the adobe bloatware.

I also have CCleaner installed, seems ok, run it now and again.

I only have Java 6 on my machine, so i guess the others are safe to remove.

 

i_should_coco

Wammer
Wammer
Sep 21, 2006
21,679
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Miller-8 wrote:

One thing I'd like to ask - Java Updates. I currently have Java updates 3, 5 and 6 on my computer. Can I remove 3 and 5 or are they still needed?
I assume you mean the JRE? Yeah, you should just be able to get rid of the old ones. As far as I can tell, they install in separate directories.

 

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