W10 responding very slooooow to create new folder -
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W10 responding very slooooow to create new folder -
Only difference is that I have installed a couple of drives - probably not germane to this discussion.
Now when I right-click on a folder to add a sub-folder I get a long delay. 15-40 seconds or never. This is annoying and wasn't an issue during my 20 years or so of using Windows. What's going on and how can I get my performance back?
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I have problems even getting to Safe Mode. Using the Tenforums tutorial I get to Step 5 shown below and when I click on Restart my computer shuts down completely (doesn't restart). I've waited several minutes thinking maybe a delay but it doesn't restart.
I always can press the on/off switch on the computer to get it to reboot and it'll boot back into Windows. But I'm no longer getting the flash during boot that tells what to hit to get to my BIOS settings. I don't recalll whether it's esc, F10, F12 or whatever. I've tried several but can't get to my BIOS settings.
How should I proceed? I can provide screenshots once in W10 or take a camera photo outside Windows.
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5. Click/tap on Restart. (see screenshot below)
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You can try the clean boot state without booting Windows into Safe mode.
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You can try the clean boot state without booting Windows into Safe mode.
Thanks.
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I followed your detailed instructions verbatim and the problem continues after restart. A block appears in the "load system services" box so I manually remove the black box to make that option empty. One difference from what you detail is that after disabling all and hitting OK there are three Avast services that reappear. I manually remove those check marks before hitting the restart button.
The problem continues.
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Avast could be causing the issue you should uninstall Avast to see issue resolves.
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Bigger problems. Now the computer won't start at all (I'm working from my laptop). The last thing that I tried was to go to msconfig and choose the second tab (Boot) and select safe mode. Then hit restart and the computer shut down and won't restart. I unplugged from the power cord to try to reset and it still won't restart. It does initiate something as the on-board LEDs flash for a while then nothing. I have a windows rescue disc that I've never used until now and it won't boot from that either. The DVD drive spins for a while but nothing comes up on the monitor. one quick beep from the box as soon as I turn it on but no additional diagnostic beeps. It just spins the DVD for a while then stops - nothing on the monitor.
As mentioned earlier I also cannot get to BIOS setup. I think that "boot from DVD" is in the startup chain after the HDD option but I'm not sure.
I'm thinking that I may need to start a new thread for this because it is much different from the thread title. Any advice is appreciated.
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There is not much we can do if you cannot boot from Windows setup DVD. You can force Windows Recovery Environment by powering on your computer and soon as Windows try to boot force shutdown with power button you need to do this few times.
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I got my computer back by disconnecting everything except the monitor. I apparently have some kind of hardware problem external to the main box. But I still have the slow response in Windows Explorer mentioned in my starting thread.
Any advice on how to diagnose my computer problems or is this beyond the Windows (software) forum here?
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Further thought....
The scary problem (when my computer wouldn't start) seems to be the way that Windows handles the hardware rather than the hardware itself. With all external devices removed except monitor, mouse, and keyboard the computer now boots normally showing the manufacturer splash screen and BIOS opening option. I did a chkdsk and there were no bad sectors found.
Back in the old days there was something like hardware conflicts where two pieces of hardware tried to share the same space or something like that. Is there some utility to check for hardware conflicts or is that even a possibility with W10? Is a good approach for me at this point to repair or reinstall Windows?
I'm tempted to simply reinstall the external devices one by one until I find the one that is problematic, But then I'm still left with the slow response problem that started this thread and which I continue to have even with all my extraneous hardware removed.