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Computer Consulting Businesses: What Your "Sweet Spot" Clients Are Looking For, Part One
When providing B2B service, computer consulting businesses' ideal clients, or "sweet spot," are companies with 10-50 PCs and 1-10 million in revenue. These "sweet spot" small businesses typically look for four things in their computer consulting...

Buying a computer
In today's world of technology buying a computer can be difficult and confusing. Because of this we've decided to write this article to guide you next time you buy a computer. Before you buy a computer it's important to decide what you want....

How to Add MIDI to Your Computer
Interested in making your own music? Writing songs, instrumental music, even symphonies? You can do it with your computer thanks to the wonderful technology known as MIDI – Musical Instrument Digital Interface. No need to know how to read music,...

Beeps! Your computer is telling you something.
One beep from your computer at startup can make your whole day. Just ask anyone that has turned on the PC and suffered the agony of several beeps and then nothing. When you purchase a computer, it will arrive with the BIOS (Basic Input/Output...

Dusting Your Computer - Keeping it Cool
My mother always told me to dust, but I never did, mostly because I was lazy, but also because I couldn't find any tangible benefit to dusting. I just didn't see how I'd benefit from my room or my things being less dusty. Well now I've gotten a bit...

 
What Slows Down My Computer On Bootup?


1) Auto-Starting Services
Too many services starting on bootup will slow your computer down. Not all services are created equally and performance degredation varies from service to service.
2) Auto-Starting Applications
This is the usual culprit for bootup performance problems. All of these applications are executed when windows starts. In Windows XP you can use "msconfig" to significantly reduce startup times.
3) User Profile Data
If user profile data is corrupt, damaged, or missing it may critically slow down your bootup time. Sometimes it can take ten minutes or more to start a computer with this type of problem.
4) Device Drivers
Poorly written device drivers can slow down system loading time considerably. If you think this may be the case try uninstalling suspected hardware from your computer.
5) Winlogon or Explorer shim components
Viruses and some unorthodox anti-virus products will create substitute (or "shim") programs that wrap system components. In these situations it's inevitable that your bootup time will take longer. Remove the offending anti-virus programs or scan for viruses if you think this is the case.
6) Hard Drive (Hardware Level) Performance
When your computer starts up it needs to access a slew of things from the hard drive. Device drivers and core system files need to be loaded off of disk and into memory before you can start using windows. If your hard drive is aging or just slow this can quickly become a performance bottleneck.
7) Hard Drive Disk Fragmentation
Ideally (and this is true in newer versions of Windows), system files and drivers are shrouded from the woes of fragmentation. However, auto-starting applications are usually not. Severe disk fragmentation can cause a noticeable slow down. Defragment often and be rewarded with a quicker start time.
8) CPU Performance
As well as reducing your normal system performance, a very slow CPU can add lots of time onto your bootup time. For most users, however, this is not the source of their startup troubles.
9) BIOS Settings
Fine tuning the BIOS can shave off several seconds of time by removing unnecessary checks and diagnostics.

About The Author

John Ashburn has been involved in computer technical support for over seven years. He has worked in many positions and is skilled at providing clear and easy to digest information to end users about everyday problems with a unique minimalistic writing style.
John occasionally writes for the popular computer repair portal pcfixtool.com.
Read more of his work at: http://www.pcfixtool.com.

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