4
I noticed that a few things are running slow today on my Windows 7 laptop. Specifically, they are:
- Opening and closing windows takes several seconds for the animation to complete.
- Windows media player opens fine, but the movies are very laggy
- MMORPGs are extremely laggy
- When waking my computer from sleep mode, after entering my password, my desktop takes about 3 seconds to fade in
Other than those, everything runs at a normal speed.
Things I've done that maybe contributed to this problem:
- Changed the graphics processor (by plugging in/unplugging the charger) [however, no matter how I change the graphics, I'm still getting this lagginess]
- Installed AdBlock, a Firefox addon [I recently removed it, and I'm still experiencing this problem]
- Went into Advanced System Settings, Clicked
Settings
, and unchecked a few visual things (such as the animation for opening and closing windows) [sure, this got rid of the opening/closing windows lag, but I like that little animation - plus that leaves all the other lag problems I'm experiencing]
So, does anyone have any ideas/fixes? If so, please respond. Thank you.
Some Other Information:
- I'm on a HP Pavillion dv7 laptop, 4285 Entertainment PC, with: intel CORE i5 inside, ATI Mobility Radeon Premium Graphics, Microsoft DirectX11
- Opening and closing of windows: Defined as opening a program (i.e. Firefox) or closing it by hitting the
X
in the upper-right hand corner. Lately, the animation for opening and closing windows (which is simply either growing from the icon from the taskbar to fill the screen, or shrinking from the screen down towards the icon on the toolbar.) This problem also occurs for minimizing/maximizing windows. - Very laggy movies: defined as .avi movie files saved to My Documents which skips several frames per second and seemingly slows down the movie as a whole
- Extremely laggy games: I tried playing an MMORPG today, and movement in the game was at least 10x slower than it ever has been, even when playing on the lowest detail/graphics
- Desktop taking 3 seconds to fade in after sleep: in this scenario, I had no other programs running visibly. The computer generally fades to black from the password screen to the desktop in about 1 second, normally. However, it is now taking 3 or more seconds.
1I've re-tagged your question, and yes, this is the right place for your question – bwDraco – 2011-10-15T22:04:43.943
Ok thank you. I have taken those parts out of the question now. – Mxyk – 2011-10-15T22:06:16.307
@MikeGates For the most part turning some things off in the settings should speed things up. Tell us more about what you did with the graphics processor. Is this a laptop? – TMB – 2011-10-15T22:09:15.773
@TMB: This is a laptop, as implied by the existence of a charger:
Changed the graphics processor (by plugging in/unplugging the charger)...
– bwDraco – 2011-10-15T22:13:56.987@TMB Re-read the first line of my question :). Also, I tried turning off everything in the settings setup (aka "Adjust for Best Performace"). Nothing has changed, besides a disgusting appearance. I'm still getting the lag. – Mxyk – 2011-10-15T22:16:54.783
I think you may have accidentally triggered a power-saving power profile. Can you temporarily activate the maximum performance profile in control panel and see if things become fast again? – billc.cn – 2011-10-15T22:20:48.853
I actually have changed the power settings a few days ago. I switched the power options to Hp Recommended, rather than on Power Saver. This didn't change anything though. Or did you mean something else? If so, please explain how to do what you were implying I try. – Mxyk – 2011-10-15T22:24:41.643
@MikeGates I believe billc.cn is referring to the windows settings and not anything that is HP proprietary. – TMB – 2011-10-15T22:43:49.427
@MikeGates please right click on the desktop, go to properties, go to screen saver, and go to power settings. From there let us know how windows is configured. – TMB – 2011-10-15T22:47:46.927
I don't get
Properties
when I right click my desktop. – Mxyk – 2011-10-15T23:00:34.107Do you have the latest video card drivers (preferably directly from Nvidia/ATI) installed? I know it's a recent slowness, but I've had issues like these before without the optimal drivers installed. Most of your issues seem to be graphics related. – Stacey Hanson – 2011-10-16T00:32:23.413
I can honestly say I wouldn't know how to tell if I do or not. And even if I didn't, I wouldn't know what to do from there. I know a few things here and there about computers, but I'm still very much an amateur. – Mxyk – 2011-10-16T00:55:20.250
1Have you checked you Widnows' Task Mananger to look for busy processes? Have you checked Windows' Performance Monitor to see if it reports any potential bottlenecks? Have you examined your Windows Event Logs to see if there are any reports of errors? Have you tried a System Restore to a point in time when it was OK? How does it perform in Safe Mode? Have you used MSConfig to temporarily disable startup programs and services to see if that has any effect? – Ƭᴇcʜιᴇ007 – 2011-10-16T02:50:30.420