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I figure that my computer has slowed considerably because Micosoft no longer supports XP. If that's not why the slowness, what can I do?

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  • Balasan terakhir oleh the-edmeister

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Computer is slow to boot up. slow to close, slow to change sites and programs. My laptop is 10 years old and I have about 76% of the memory still available. I do have a WHOLE LOT of emails on two email sites, and I have a lot of bookmarks. What, if anything, can I do?

Computer is slow to boot up. slow to close, slow to change sites and programs. My laptop is 10 years old and I have about 76% of the memory still available. I do have a WHOLE LOT of emails on two email sites, and I have a lot of bookmarks. What, if anything, can I do?

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You could try upgrading the CPU and memory. But you should think about a new system.

Separate Security Issue: Update your Adobe Reader Version 2015.016.20039 Note: Other Software is offered in the download.

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  1. IMO, don't spend a dime on trying to update that old laptop, the results won't be worth the money you spend.
  2. Put that money towards a new computer; maybe last years model that is being clearanced out for new models. Unless the retail scene has changed in the last couple of years since I left "retail", May is when many office supply stores get the new model PC's and cut the price to get rid of the old stock. Stores like Staples and OfficeMax/Depot.
  3. From what I have seen advertised in the local newspaper a "special priced, on sale" (not a clearance model which usually aren't advertised) can be had for $330 to $400.
  4. Or consider a tablet device instead of a laptop.
  5. Then there's refurbished desktop PC's to consider. The "specs" won't be in the same league as a new computer, a new laptop, or a new tablet, but you would get "more hardware" and a more modern operating system that is still supported.

  • First off, WinXP hasn't gotten any security fixes for over two years now - it isn't safe to use anymore! And from what I have read recently, Firefox support may end before the end of 2016. And already there's a problem installing that last couple of new Firefox versions on both XP and Vista OS's when they lack a specific update.
  • "76% of the memory still available" - I can only guess that you mean hard drive space. And if you are using Firefox to access your "email" that "email" is coming to you via a "webmail" website which is where your "email" is stored - not stored on that laptop.
  • No one uses only 1/4 (24%) of their RAM - Random Access Memory. And most WinXP era laptops topped-out at 1GB of RAM unless it was the top of the line model. IMO And that is the important thing these days
  • 2 GB RAM is "bottom of the barrel" these days and for me on WinXP (up until a year ago) it was barely adequate, IMO. Now I am using Windows 7 with 4GB RAM which works much better, but it is still "showing its age" on a few "media rich" websites.

As far as what you can do with what you have to "buy some time" - normal maintenance:

  1. defrag the hard drive to get all the file sectors in a continuous cluster - that should speed things up quite a bit
  2. full anti-virus scan
  3. thoroughly "cleaning" with multiple Anti-Malware programs

You can use these free programs to scan for malware, which work with your existing antivirus software. They all have been available as a free "trial" version (last time I checked) or are free for limited-personal use. They are listed in the order of efficacy. You should use them all as they don't look for the same types of Malware.

Further information can be found in the Troubleshoot Firefox issues caused by malware article.