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Solve : IE slow?

Answer» <html><body><p>I had returned to the configuration I described (<a href="https://interviewquestions.tuteehub.com/tag/selective-639358" style="font-weight:bold;" target="_blank" title="Click to know more about SELECTIVE">SELECTIVE</a> start up with all, I think, ticked) I shall over a period of time, try booting up as you describe (selective, boxes unticked), to identify and eliminate the problem.  This will take a while because my old PC has problems booting up (I've started getting CPU fan failure messages, although I have a brand new startech fan, and this evening either my PC or monitor has lost <a href="https://interviewquestions.tuteehub.com/tag/red-238021" style="font-weight:bold;" target="_blank" title="Click to know more about RED">RED</a> [unplugging monitor shows RGB band with 'no signal' warning though...now I suspect {hope ?} it's my graphics card....].  this in addition to simple failure to boot, a long standing problem)<br/><br/>Dumb_Question<br/>8.September.2013<br/>Dumb_Question<br/>9.August.2012<br/>Compaq Presario S5160UK DT261A under XP/SP3 <br/>Processor - Celeron 2.7 <a href="https://interviewquestions.tuteehub.com/tag/ghz-468301" style="font-weight:bold;" target="_blank" title="Click to know more about GHZ">GHZ</a> <br/>Motherboard - MSI MS-6577 v2.1<br/>RAM - 1GB + 512MB (1GB +1GB max) DDR PC2700<br/>PSU - Octigen 300W model 10270PSOTG ('upgraded' from original Bestec 250W PSU [in 2011?])<br/><a href="https://interviewquestions.tuteehub.com/tag/nvidia-582328" style="font-weight:bold;" target="_blank" title="Click to know more about NVIDIA">NVIDIA</a> GeForce 6200 graphics card in AGP slot. Quote from: Allan on September 03, 2013, 02:06:42 PM</p><blockquote>Your suggestion might make sense if the same thing didn't <a href="https://interviewquestions.tuteehub.com/tag/happen-1015459" style="font-weight:bold;" target="_blank" title="Click to know more about HAPPEN">HAPPEN</a> with Firefox and there weren't other issues as reported in the first post in this thread.<br/></blockquote> It does make sense. It works that way. The infection is in the current user account for all browsers in stalled. Also, he can install a virgin browser and the problem goes away. (A virgin browser is one that has not been on the system. I don't know how else to say that.)Wrong...<br/>Even if a new browser is installed on an infected PC it'll still exhibit the same slowdowns...<br/>That being stated everyone chiming in has forgotten which PC we're talkin about...<br/>It's slow.</body></html>


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