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| Performance and Maintainance of Windows Vista A forum for performance and maintenance tasks in Windows Vista. (microsoft.public.windows.vista.performance_maintainance) |
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I use my laptop to play an MMoRPG Game and I noticed it runs extremely slower
than a few months back. I also noticed the System Idle Process is running and using 90% of the cpu. Is there anything I can do to speed up my computer or to stop the System Idle Process from using up all the CPU? |
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The idle process is running because system has nothing else it can do until
some other process such as a disk retrieval or receipt of some data over the network completes. If you do not defrag your disk regularly maybe you should do so to reduce the clock time required to retrieve a file from disk. "RuthlessIX" wrote in message ... I use my laptop to play an MMoRPG Game and I noticed it runs extremely slower than a few months back. I also noticed the System Idle Process is running and using 90% of the cpu. Is there anything I can do to speed up my computer or to stop the System Idle Process from using up all the CPU? |
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So defragmenting the disks may fix the problem? It is on Windows Vista and it
had been defragmenting often as far as I know. "JW" wrote: The idle process is running because system has nothing else it can do until some other process such as a disk retrieval or receipt of some data over the network completes. If you do not defrag your disk regularly maybe you should do so to reduce the clock time required to retrieve a file from disk. "RuthlessIX" wrote in message ... I use my laptop to play an MMoRPG Game and I noticed it runs extremely slower than a few months back. I also noticed the System Idle Process is running and using 90% of the cpu. Is there anything I can do to speed up my computer or to stop the System Idle Process from using up all the CPU? |
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It sounds like defragging again will not resolve the issue.
Apparently the game is waiting for data to come off of either the program file on the disk of from the paging file. How much main memory do you have? How big is your paging file? Do you have a ReadyBoost flash drive/card installed? "RuthlessIX" wrote in message ... So defragmenting the disks may fix the problem? It is on Windows Vista and it had been defragmenting often as far as I know. "JW" wrote: The idle process is running because system has nothing else it can do until some other process such as a disk retrieval or receipt of some data over the network completes. If you do not defrag your disk regularly maybe you should do so to reduce the clock time required to retrieve a file from disk. "RuthlessIX" wrote in message ... I use my laptop to play an MMoRPG Game and I noticed it runs extremely slower than a few months back. I also noticed the System Idle Process is running and using 90% of the cpu. Is there anything I can do to speed up my computer or to stop the System Idle Process from using up all the CPU? |
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On Sat, 29 Dec 2007 20:36:00 -0800, RuthlessIX
wrote: I use my laptop to play an MMoRPG Game and I noticed it runs extremely slower than a few months back. I also noticed the System Idle Process is running and using 90% of the cpu. Is there anything I can do to speed up my computer or to stop the System Idle Process from using up all the CPU? "System Idle Process" is not any problem at all. That's just the name for what the system is doing when it's not doing anything. It's there to make the total add up to 100%. Look elsewhere for the cause of your slowdown. These days that's often symptomatic of malware infection. I recommend that you begin troubleshooting by going to MVP Malke's malware removal site at http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/...moving_Malware and following the instructions there. -- Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP Windows - Shell/User Please Reply to the Newsgroup |
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RuthlessIX wrote:
I use my laptop to play an MMoRPG Game and I noticed it runs extremely slower than a few months back. I also noticed the System Idle Process is running and using 90% of the cpu. Is there anything I can do to speed up my computer or to stop the System Idle Process from using up all the CPU? Break out a dictionary and look up the word "idle," sometime. ;-} The "System Idle Process" metric is the amount/percentage of time that your CPU has *nothing* to do. A reading of 98-99% is generally considered a good thing, and readings above 90% are normal. Think of it like a car's engine idling in your driveway before you place the car in gear. -- Bruce Chambers Help us help you: http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety. ~Benjamin Franklin Many people would rather die than think; in fact, most do. ~Bertrand Russell The philosopher has never killed any priests, whereas the priest has killed a great many philosophers. ~ Denis Diderot |
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I disagree with the answers posted here. If I am on my computer I am not idle. I don't turn the computer on to stare at the screen. I am always doing something, whether it be surfing the Internet, sending/receiving emails, browsing myspace/facebook....my computer is NEVER idle. I have done the same thing on this computer since I got it and I've NEVER had Systerm Idle Process until the last two or three weeks. I do a disk clean up and start a defrag EVERY night when I go to bed. The next morning the defrag is done, I restart the comptuer and BAM!!! System Idle Process. I do not do "scan disk" daily; however, I do it regularly. I run my spyware removal, virus scan....all the necessary things to keep a computer running smoothly...nothing seems to work. The only thing I have changed on my computer in the last few weeks was to download McAfee Security Center. I have uninstalled in this morning (just prior to typing this). I hope it changes things once I reboot the computer. I will say this, I know for a fact, doing disk scan, disk clean up, defrag, virus scan, spyware scan...none of this makes a difference at all. -- Yancy Box |
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Hi, Yancy.
And do you turn off your car's key when the traffic light turns red? Or do you let the engine idle until the light turns green? That's what the "system idle process" is doing much of the day. Computers are so fast that, even for the fastest typist writing a letter in Word, for example, MOST of the computer's time is spent waiting for the next keystroke. Idling. And the faster the computer, the more time it has to idle. Even when multi-tasking a dozen applications at once, the computer usually has plenty of "free" time when it is just idling, waiting to see if we are going to press the Start button or do something else to interrupt it. and I've NEVER had Systerm Idle Process until the last two or three weeks. Then you must not have ever looked for it before. Because it HAS been idling. In Task Manager, on the Processes tab, make sure the CPU column is displayed and sorted with the biggest number at the top. If you don't see "System Idle Process" at the top, then look at the bottom of this window to the box labeled, "Show processes from all users". Check this box and watch the display change. Don't be surprised if you see System Idle Process at the top with a BIG number in the CPU column. At this moment, I have a half-dozen applications running in the background, plus I'm drafting this post, and, of course, Task Manager itself is running. Still the System Idle Process is getting 98-99% of CPU time. The CPU is just idling, waiting for me to "step on the gas" - to give it something MORE to do. ;^} It's A Good Thing! RC -- R. C. White, CPA San Marcos, TX Microsoft Windows MVP (Running Windows Live Mail 2009 in Win7 Ultimate x64 7000) "Yancy Box" wrote in message ... I disagree with the answers posted here. If I am on my computer I am not idle. I don't turn the computer on to stare at the screen. I am always doing something, whether it be surfing the Internet, sending/receiving emails, browsing myspace/facebook....my computer is NEVER idle. I have done the same thing on this computer since I got it and I've NEVER had Systerm Idle Process until the last two or three weeks. I do a disk clean up and start a defrag EVERY night when I go to bed. The next morning the defrag is done, I restart the comptuer and BAM!!! System Idle Process. I do not do "scan disk" daily; however, I do it regularly. I run my spyware removal, virus scan....all the necessary things to keep a computer running smoothly...nothing seems to work. The only thing I have changed on my computer in the last few weeks was to download McAfee Security Center. I have uninstalled in this morning (just prior to typing this). I hope it changes things once I reboot the computer. I will say this, I know for a fact, doing disk scan, disk clean up, defrag, virus scan, spyware scan...none of this makes a difference at all. -- Yancy Box |
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Alright it's good that's a good thing... for you, but you wouldn't say that if you were on my computer. Even my cursor is moving like flash lights in night clubs. I won't describe all the problems it gave, but please tell at least how to make it back to normal, or a you alreay mentioned how to press the start button. Because even when I'm playing games that usually take not less than all of my CPU it doesn't get low... at ALL. Landry -- Landry |
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Alright it's good that's a good thing... for you, but you wouldn't say that if you were on my computer. Even my cursor is moving like flash lights in night clubs. I won't describe all the problems it gave, but please tell at least how to make it back to normal, or a you alreay mentioned how to press the start button. Because even when I'm playing games that usually take not less than all of my CPU it doesn't get low... at ALL. Landry -- Landry |
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