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How to Make Your Computer Run

Faster

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72 Editors

Edited 17 hours ago

Two Methods:WindowsMacintosh

Have you noticed that your computer runs slower than before? Or just slowly in general?
Try these strategies to make your Windows or Mac computer run faster.

Method 1 of 2: Windows

1.

1
Check your hard disk space. As a rule, you want to keep at least 15% of the hard disk
space free to keep the computer running smoothly. Simply go to My Computer, rightclick on Local Drive, and go to Properties. There you'll see a pie chart of your free
versus used space. If its mostly full, you'll want to start by removing unnecessary
programs and files; if its not, you probably want to tackle the actual way your computer
operates.
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2.

2
Remove any programs you do not use. Go to Control Panel > Add or Remove
Programs (or Uninstall a Program, depending on your operating system) to find a
master list of programs installed on your computer. Some things will strike you as
useless immediately, in which case you can remove them right away. Others wont look
familiar to you and may require you some research.
o

It may help to see how often you use the program. If you right-click one of
the column titles above your program list (ex. Name, Publisher, Size, Installed On, etc.),

you should be able to add additional characteristics by which to judge your programs.
For example, find Last Used On on the list of options and check it; a column displaying
the last time you used each program will now appear and can also be used to sort your
programs. Some programs will not have been used in years and may be candidates for
deletion.

When in doubt, don't remove anything you dont recognize; it may be


critical to the function of your computer and if you delete twelve different things only to
discover that your computer no longer works properly, it will be very difficult to determine
where exactly you went wrong.

Don't forget to empty your recycling bin.

3
Prevent unnecessary programs from starting when the computer boots. The more
programs try to run while your computer initializes, the slower your startup time will be.
Revise your startup programs by altering your system configuration via MSConfig.

Change power options in Control Panel, to High Performance if you have a


Desktop PC as it may prevent Hardware Throttling by Manufacturer!

5
Disable any programs which run in the background. Background applications can
take up valuable CPU cycles and ram, so disable the ones you don't need.

6
Remove any unnecessary entries from the Windows Context menu. Several
programs vie to sit in your context menu, and if you're not actively using them, disabling
them will get your context menu to show up much faster the next time you bring it up.

7
Install an anti-virus program, spyware scanner, and an anti-malware also
Microsoft Security essentials works well. The fewer bugs, viruses, and bits of
adware your computer has to manage, the more time it will have to devote to other
processes. While you're at it, make a point of keeping Windows up-to-date; not only will
this keep Windows itself in better shape, but some viruses ride in on Windows updates
that are downloaded way after the fact (and therefore not monitored as closely).

While installing an anti-virus program will actually slow down your

computer, malware will slow it down much more. If you're 100 percent sure that viruses
aren't going to infect you due to your safe computing habits, you might want to disable
or remove your anti virus utility.

8
Run a Disk Cleanup. This can clean up hundreds of megabytes of temporary files
sometimes even gigabytes (if you have Windows XP, Vista, or 7). It will also open a
window in which you can chose what to delete. Go to My Computer, right-click

the Hard Drive and select Properties, and then click Disc Cleanup (within the General
tab). Check all the boxes except for the game files and setup files.

9
Get an SSD. Solid State Drives (SSD's) can complement or replace your hard disk, and
they are faster and much more secure than hard drives.

10
Run a Disk Defragment. This will reconfigure the way the hard drive stores information
for maximum efficiency. Go to My Computer, right-click the Hard Drive and
select Properties, then go to the Tools tab and click Defragment Now.

11
Check for any disk errors. These will also slow your computer down. Go to My
Computer, right-click the Hard Drive and select Properties, then go to theTools tab
and click Check Now under the Error-Checking area. When the dialogue box opens,
check both boxes.
o

If you get a window saying that Windows can't check the disk while it's in
use, click on Schedule Disk Check and then OK. It will run on your next reboot.

12
Turn off indexing. Go to My Computer, right-click the Hard Drive and
selectProperties, then unclick the box indicating that the drive should be indexed. Don't
do this if you actually use any of the Windows Search functionality. The background
indexing is what makes those searches fast and Windows is already very good about
not getting in your way to do indexing while you're trying to do something else.

13
Clear your Prefetch folder. Windows saves a file of the program you are using to make
it start up faster. After years of use, this folder gets stuffed with irrelevant programs.

Open Notepad and type:


del C:\Windows\Prefetch\*.* /Q
Rundll32.exe advapi32.dll,ProcessIdleTasks (Copy and paste this text to ensure you
dont make any mistakes.)

Save as faster.bat (the .bat extension will run it as a batch file).

Run it! Simply double-click the file to initialize. In a few moments, the
command prompt will disappear and your programs should run more smoothly.

14
Change Prefetch Parameters. This a dangerous task to complete unless you follow
these steps exactly. If you're not sure about anything, dont continue.

Go to Start > Run and type regedit to initialize the registry editor.

Go
toHKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE>SYSTEM>CurrentControlSet>Control>Session
Manager>Memory Management>Prefetch Parameters to access the parameters.

Double-click EnablePrefetcher. Once the new window pops up, there


should be a small, editable text box with the number 3 in it. (Windows allows 4 options:
0, 1, 2 and 3.) 3, the default, fetches everything.

Change this to 2. Your PC will boot a lot faster and your PC performance
shouldn't be affected.

Click OK and then close regedit.

15
Disable any fancy Windows effects. Go to Control Panel>System>Advanced System
Settings and click on the bullet which says 'Adjust for best performance'.

16
Add RAM to your computer. To see if you need more RAM, initialize theWindows
Task Manager by pressing CTRL+ALT+DELETE. Under thePerformance tab, find the
area devoted to Physical Memory. If the Free amount hovers around zero but the
computer is still slow, you may need to take your computer in to add RAM or even add
more RAM yourself.

17
Restart your computer. The computer usually needs to reboot to implement changes.

18
Remove gadgets you don't use. All gadgets that are running slow down your
computer.

19
Log off the users who do not want the computer. Switch user your account then if
you see that many users are logged in, log them off.

Method 2 of 2: Macintosh

1. 1
Check your hard disk space. As a rule, you want to keep around 30% of the hard disk
space free to keep things running smoothly. Simply right-click the Hard Driveicon on
your desktop and go to Get Info.

2. 2
Uninstall unnecessary programs. You can either uninstall them manually ordownload
a program to help you sort and delete them. Some things will strike you as useless
immediately, in which case you can remove them right away. Others wont look familiar
to you and may require you to do some research.
o

When in doubt, don't remove anything you dont recognize; it may be


critical to the function of your computer and if you delete twelve different things only to
discover that your computer no longer works properly, it will be very difficult to determine
where exactly you went wrong.

3
Delete files you don't need. Unless you have very little storage space on your
computer or simply have an abundance of unnecessary documents, deleting small files

won't make much of an impact on your computers overall function. However, any large
files like movies you never watch, photos you don't need, or songs you never listen to
can really gum up the works and should definitely be removed.
o

Don't forget to empty your trash bin.

4
Prevent unnecessary programs from starting when the Mac boots. The more
programs try to run while your computer initializes, the slower everything will be. Go
toSystem > Preferences > Accounts > Login Items. Select any items you dont need
and click the minus (-) sign to remove them.

5
Repair the disk. Go to Applications > Utilities > Run Disk Utility to repair both the
disk and the disk permissions. Its a good idea to run this once a month or at least once
every few months.

Remove unnecessary dashboard widgets. Even if you dont have the dashboard
activated, these widgets can eat up RAM by running background updates while you try
to do other things.
If you have OS X 10.4.2 or later, simply use the Widget Manager: go to

theDashboard and open the Widget Bar by clicking the plus (+) sign; click Manage
Widgets and then either deselect widgets to disable them or, if theyre third-party
widgets, remove them completely by pressing the red delete button, which is a circle
with a line through it, and click OK to confirm.

If you use Mac OS X, download a free program called Monolingual. With OS X,


much of your computers hard disk is devoted to virtual memory and gets eaten up by
language-availability software. Monolingual will allow you to remove languages you dont
use on in order to free up space.
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Tips

It is best to create a System Restore point before you uninstall any programs or
make any changes, so you can revert your computer back to a safe point if anything
goes wrong.

As a general rule, it is best not to fiddle with anything you are not sure about. Try

reading through several guides on the web to understand what you are doing before you
do it.
If you want to be really careful, install a virtual machine and experiment with

changes there before doing it on your pc.


A clean install of the operating system will make your pc run much faster, but will

erase all your files.


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Warnings

Never delete system32 files on Windows! These are critical to running the OS
correctly and will break your computer.

Do not delete "shared" files! Sometimes, a program you dont want shares files
with programs you do want, making those files unsuitable for deletion. Deleting the
incorrect shared file can have wide-ranging consequences.

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