OKnewguy said:One thought: on the battery, my clock has remained consistent. Does the clock auto update off the internet or something? I do not know, but just thinking out loud. I know in the past I have had computer throw a prompt during startup that say the cmos was faulty. Is there another way to check?
Thanks again, Dave
Dmace said:Secondly, go to the Performance tab of the task manager and look under the "Physical Memory (K)" table to see the total available RAM. My laptop has 512MB of RAM so it reads "523496". Now look at the Peak Commit Charge and see if that number is higher than your total physical memory. Mine reads 319868 so the computer has plenty of RAM for the programs I run. If the peak is higher than your total then you need more RAM. When your computer runs out of RAM it uses hard drive space, the problem is that accessing the hard drive is about 10,000 times slower than accessing the RAM. No exaggeration, real numbers. RAM is cheap and easy to install, it's the best performance per dollar upgrade available if neccessary.
slewisma said:On the disk format question, usually when you re-format the disk, you are asked if you want to do a low level format or if you want to do a full scan of the disk sectors or something along these lines. Checks every sector on the drive by writing and reading back and marks bad sectors as bad so they don't get used. If there were a lot of bad sectors identified in this process, you'd have an indication of a dying drive.