Why the Slow Boots?

By Lincoln Spector, PC World |  Windows, desktop PC Add a new comment

Cary Dwyer's PC used to boot quickly. Not anymore.

You probably have too many autoloading programs. If a brand-new PC boots slowly, you can bet that the vendor weighted it down with too many bundled programs that load automatically with every boot. If a once-fast PC has developed that problem over time, you've probably added too many of these programs, yourself--perhaps without realizing it.

Which doesn't mean you have to remove the programs; you just have to turn off their autoloaders. I use Photoshop nearly every week, but I see no need for a Photoshop icon in the system tray, or a little piece of Photoshop always in memory.

Before you do anything else, create a system restore point: In XP, select Start, All Programs, Accessories, System Tools, then System Restore. Select Create a restore point, click Next and follow the wizard. In Vista, click Start, type sysdm.cpl and press ENTER. Click the System Protection tab, then the Create button.

To see all of your autoloaders, select Start, then Run, type msconfig, and press ENTER (you don't have to click Run in Vista). Click the Startup tab. You can uncheck any of the listed programs to keep them from autoloading.

Which ones should you uncheck? Not your antivirus, firewall, or security suite; you need those running at all times. Other than that, you have to use your own judgment and experiments to determine what you want running at all times and what you want to launch when you need it.

Sometimes an autoloader you've unchecked--perhaps days or weeks ago--will reappear on the list later. Why? Because the program that put it there in the first place senses that it's no longer autoloading and corrects your "mistake." In these cases, examine that program's Options or Preferences menu and look for something like "Launch when Windows loads" or "Put in System Tray." Uncheck that option.

What else can slow down a once-fast boot? An overloaded or corrupted Registry. But Registry cleaning is inherently dangerous, and I don't recommend it unless things have become unbearable. See How Best Do I Clean My Registry? for details.

Add your comments to this article below. If you have other tech questions, email them to me at answer@pcworld.com, or post them to a community of helpful folks on the PCW Answer Line forum.

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