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Posts Tagged ‘Operating System’

What happen when the software does not get installed ?

December 17th, 2012 1 comment

What happens when you download a software (hardware monitoring utilities) on XP & after running set-up, program starts getting installed & in the end you get a pop up informing that its not meant for this type of mother board !

My question is that Do any type of software component are left over your operating system in this unsuccessful installation ? If yes, how we can detect them & remove from the system completely, as they are useless.

Most of the time, when that message comes up, it did not install into your computer at all. During initial installation, the install program scans the program to get the files ready for installation, if it encounters a problem, it normally stops the installation and delete the files that were supposed to be ready for install.

To ensure complete deletion, do a search on your computer on your entire C drive for the program name. If results come up, then delete everything corresponding with that program name.

Then go to START then RUN and type REGEDIT then hit enter.
Go to the directory HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE and then click on Software and make sure the program folder is not in that directory. If it is, then delete it. That will clean it from your registry.

how do you remove the blue registry screen from the windows xp operating system?

November 11th, 2012 2 comments

My computer won’t start after booting. I get this blue screen that reads the hive registry is missing or corrupt. How do I fix this problem?

Could be a problem with device drivers, hardware or software. This problem can be solved by uninstalling new software, updating device drivers and making minor configuration changes . From http://fixit.in/bluescreenofdeath.html . You can also run a free registry scan using utilities from http://re7.info

How do you stop the registry cleaner message from popping up?

November 5th, 2012 3 comments

Registry cleaner message keeps popping up- do not want it. Need step by step instructions to stop it from showing. Thanks.

Do these popups say "Messenger Service" in the title bar?

If so, then you are using an older version or (un-updated) of Windows (pre XP SP2). These type of popups exploit the Messenger Service in your Windows OS, which after XP SP2 is disabled by default.

A popup blocker "thingy" will be of no help in this case.

You have 3 choices to end the problem.

1. You can disable and stop Messenger Service by typing "services msc." (without the ""s) into your Run Box and then disabling and stopping Messenger Service.

OR

2. You can use the free utility called Shoot The Messenger to automatically disable this unnecessary service.
http://www.grc.com/stm/shootthemessenger.htm

Please note that Windows Messenger Service is not the same as any Instant Messenger program that you may have on your computer. Disabling it will not cause you to lose any IM functionality that you may have.

OR (Best Solution)

3. Update or upgrade your operating system to at least Windows XP Service Pack 2 (SP2).

Good luck

TuneUp Utilities 2010 Registry Defrag black screen?

July 14th, 2011 1 comment

Ok, I ran the TuneUp Utilities 2010 registry defrag on my dads computer, and it needed to optimize. I try to restart the computer afterwards, but all I get is the white flashing underscore, after the Acer logo where it tells you to press F2 to access setup (BIOS Settings). I am not sure why it is not restarting, but I think it is because the defrag messed it up? I may need to install a different operating system, but as of now, I think that may be my only option. Please help

Hmm, that’s an odd result and one we’ve never heard before. Did your dad’s PC have a virus or a hardware problem? If the PC is ok and virus free, then follow these instructions to set everything right again. This will get a bit technical but it’s really not that difficult and we’ll walk you through it.

Since TuneUp Utilities just runs an analysis of your Windows registry, the defragmentation itself runs on a boot version of Windows (the same pipe in which Windows would run a ChkDsk, for example).

Depending on the operating system you are using, you should try the repair and recovery function from your OS’s original CD. This will let you edit the registry, remove the boot, and execute the entry of TuneUp Utilities. If the TuneUp Utilities’ boot application is causing the problem, this should fix the issue. Here’s a step-by-step guide:

Open this path in registry:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Session Manager
Check the value of BootExecute (it should look like autocheck autochk *)
Remove anything else entered in this value and reboot

If this doesn’t solve the problem, it most likely isn’t TuneUp Utilities, but contact our tech support directly and we’ll try to help you anyway.
http://www.tune-up.com/support/form/?formmode=technical

Sweat Your Assets – Windows Pc Performance Troubleshooting and Optimisation

March 24th, 2011 No comments

Times are Uncertain – do you really need that upgrade or new PC?

Our customers and prospective customers frequently come to us and ask that we suggest either upgrades or whole new PC’s that will solve their current non-performance nightmare with an aging PC.  It’s quite amazing how sometimes as the conversation and understanding of requirements and problems experienced proceeds we discover that actually the PC they already have may just still have a few laps around the circuit left in its tired chassis.  In this article we will explain how you can diagnose your performance woes, streamline and tune them up.  You’d be surprised just how much more you can get out of what you have.

Tip!  Before making any serious system changes such as some of these are its wise to take a backup or restore point of your system before each change.  Then should you subsequently find something is ‘broken’ you can restore back to a previous working configuration.

Analyse the problem before implementing the solution…

Use monitoring tools regularly – get in the habit of watching Task Manager and lookout for tasks and processes that are hogging your system memory or CPU.  Task manager displays both in the process view as you can see below, you can also sort by clicking on the column headings.  Even if you only use the Internet and eMail both these applications are renowned for memory leaks and processor bound loops (see an explanation of these problems in the next section).

Monitor Free Disk Space – ensure you have at least 20% disk space, preferably 30% or more should be free.  If you don’t the file system struggles to operate as it needs some space in order to allocate and deallocate files the operating system and applications require while in use.  Imagine walking into a hall full of boxes and you need to order them all by colour, in a room 70% full you’ve got 30% free space to temporarily put things in while you move other stuff around, in a room 99% full you may have no room at all to use as a temporary store.  Use our earlier tip for reducing disk space consumption by eliminating unused installed programs or disk space is cheap these days with 1TB at under £100, upgrade your disk.

New Software invariably uses more Memory – finally, if you need an upgrade the one that makes the biggest difference in 80% of cases is simply adding more memory.  RAM is now fairly cheap and you should consider 2GB to be the minimum of practical RAM to have installed.  Every time you upgrade it try to double it or you’re unlikely to really notice the difference.  On 32-bit systems there is little advantage to having more than 3GB of memory but usually it makes sense to upgrade to 4GB due to the size of memory kits available.  If you need more than 4GB you will also need to upgrade to a 64-bit operating system.  You can see your memory utilisation by consulting the Task Manager, ctrl-alt-del presents you an option to start the task manager.

In a typical example 2GB of physical memory is installed, of which roughly 1GB is available, although windows is misleading us a bit here as it will always make sure some memory remains available or it will simply cease to function.  So don’t look for 0 available free memory as an indicator that you need more, it never will be allowed to reach 0 as windows will swap a process out into the page file to free more memory up.  There is 1.11GB of memory currently consumed (in the page file ‘PF Usage’, Commit Charge – Total).  The page file is actually virtual memory on disk as tasks become active and inactive they may be swapped into and out of memory into the page file, hence that pause sometimes when you switch to another task as the disk is accessed to bring it back out of the page file.  Activity in the page file and virtual memory is complex and I won’t go into any more of that here as it doesn’t help you with performance issues.  The key point to remember is if Windows is swapping memory out to the page file on disk then your system will be going a lot slower as you can be sure however fast your disk is it’s an awful lot slower than physical memory.

What we care most about is activity in real physical memory and the point at which we might run out of it and the page file becomes more active hence slowing down the system.  Crucially the Commit Charge Peak should balance the physical memory available otherwise it means an awful lot of page file swapping is going on (known as ‘Page Faults’).  If it was the yellow line in Page File Usage history would be bouncing around, or worse just steadily increasing.   

Adjust Total Page File size – following on from the point above if your system page file size is too small your system will slow down or even fail to start tasks (usually with a system message to tell you the computer is out of memory).  You can check this by looking at the Page File Total versus Peak size.  If they are close to each other then you need to increase your page file size.  With most windows default configurations this will happen automatically.

The exotic world of Deadlocks, Infinite Loops and Cartesian products – are all programming jargon that essentially describe bugs (though not always).  The programmer of an application or product you’re using (and that includes the ones you take for granted like Windows and Device drivers) has likely made an error in designing or implementing the code such that logically it can never get past a certain point in its execution.  The consequence of this poorly designed code can be that the processor cycles used in this ‘loop’ consume all the available resources of your PC (check your task manager, which process is using 99-100% of the processor!? Or just ‘not responding’).  You will notice this as your machine will suddenly lock-up, go dead slow, or the application in question will just hang.  Thankfully with multi-core PC’s hanging is less of a problem as the other free cores can be used to KILL the task off and bring your PC back to life…

Run concurrently as few tasks as you need – each time you open up a task remember each one is using up a little more memory.  If your memory or processing power is limited try to keep open only what you regularly need and close what you don’t it doesn’t take so long to reopen, and if it does it probably means you have too many open already!  Also bear in mind just because you can’t see an application doesn’t mean it’s not using up any processing cycles, it will be.  All applications process events which might be system activity, emails being sent/received, diary alarms going off, keyboard or mouse movements, activity from external devices like printers and USB drives.  They also monitor activity in the background even when you aren’t doing anything with them.  This consumes more of those valuable clock cycles…

Typical solutions to try or consider

De-install and delete any unused software – take a look at your control panel Add/Remove Software icon and go through the list of installed applications line by line.  If you don’t need or use it remove it.  It may be taking up valuable space or cycles on your machine.

Disable Windows Defender – For Vista users there are a number of new Windows ‘features’ that if you are an experienced PC User who understands how to roam the internet or email and download files safely you do not need. Windows Defender and Firewall are such services, if you have a third party or router firewall you more than likely just don’t need this services enabled.  To disable windows defender, go to control panel->administrative tools -> services -> windows defender and stop the service, setting it to disabled or manual so that it does not restart on reboot.

Disable UAC (User Access Control) – To experienced Windows XP users this feature has won a thousand polls as the most annoying new feature. Whenever you execute anything which affects system configuration or the filesystem (which is just about everything you might want to do that’s useful!), a modal popup asks whether you want the operation to proceed.  Again use your judgement on your experience and competency with Windows, inexperienced users should probably leave it as is otherwise you will want to disable it.  To disable user access control, go to control panel->user account->turn user account control off.  You can also disable it using the msconfig.exe utility on the Tools tab, or directly in the registry.

Optmise the Windows GUI – Windows Vista Premium and above has by default the Aero user interface enabled, this uses the 3D capabilities of your graphics card and will use up some precious CPU cycles.  Unless you love the new look interface feel free to reduce load on your processor and memory and turn it off.  To optimise system configuration for maximum performance, go to control panel->performance information and tools-> advanced tools-> adjust the appearance and performance of windows-> Select Adjust for best performance radio button and hit Apply.

Remove Startup programs – A lot of applications helpfully install themselves on your machine to startup and drop into the System Tools tray as your machine boots or, or as you log in depending on how they are configured.  Almost none of these programs will actually be required and they are only installed this way to save on the time taken for their first execution (as they are already in memory, in theory).  Our recommendations are you remove all programs to reduce startup time, reduce memory overhead and to improve overall system performance. You can change startup programs using msconfig.exe or directly in the registry with the regedit command (alter the registry with caution!).  Our recommendation is that you use msconfig.exe (pictured below, Windows XP version) and scroll through the list of startup programs unchecking anything you know you don’t use or need to startup on boot/login.  In the registry find the startup programs under Computer-> HKEY_CURRENT_USER->Software-> Microsoft-> Windows-> CurrentVersion-> Run.  In Windows XP you can safely remove ALL startup programs without it being terminal, you need to be a bit more careful with Vista. 

AntiVirus (AV) – programs are notorious for reducing system performance and increasing hard disk load.  Take a long and careful look at the configuration of your AV product and turn off any scanning or intervention that is unnecessary, turning off any supplementary tools, and any duplication of tools such as double spam checking etc.  Typically you should treat AV as your second line of defence behind the firewall.  You are only really likely to get a virus from outside the secure zone that is ‘Your PC’, unless you’re in the habit of writing your own.  So a viral attack is only likely to come from a software download, a rogue floppy or CD install, or a malicious Browser add on from the Internet.  Some scare mongers have led us to believe that the viruses crawl down the wires and install themselves on your PC, they don’t, they only get installed from outside and only then if you allow it.

For this protection all you need virus scanned is inbound email, inbound software installs from removable media (CD, DVD, USB, eSATA, Firewire, Blu-Ray, Floppy etc.).  We recommend turning off automated and scheduled scans, these are real system hogs and should be totally unnecessary if all inbound scans are working as they should be.  Instead manually choose for yourself when you would like a total system scan just in case something was missed as it came in.  We like minimalist AV tools that just do the simple jobs well and no more.  A good AntiVirus should be like good children, nice to know you have it, but invisible and unobtrusive.

Disable unnecessary services – Your system might have a lot of services which you may not need. But identifying them may not be very easy.  Open up control panel-> administrative tools-> services and stop/disable services. Some of the services which should be disabled are Windows Search, Windows Defender, Windows Cardspace, and usually a number of third party tools such as HP print managers, Adobe tools, Real player, MSN, Google toolbar, Antivirus control panels etc.

Windows Search Indexing – A tricky one as it sometimes speeds things up, but at other times can slow things down.  In theory it only runs when your machine is idle, but we’ve found that is not always the case and it can also consume shared network bandwidth.  We suggest you disable Windows Search indexing as it may improve performance substantially, especially if you have a new system as it will expend a considerable amount of system resources building indexes. However, once the indexes are built it will reduce the time to find files with a file search (if you do that much?) considerably.  So, if this something you do a lot you should turn it off while you are using the PC then turn it on again when you’re done and just leave it running.  Windows Search will then just happily build indexes in the background while the PC is idle.  Eventually you will have a fully populated index and you can just leave it on so that the index is automatically maintained.

Defragment hard drive – perhaps one of the oldest tricks in the book.  As you install, deinstall, and move files around on your PC clusters of files and parts of files get distributed all over the disks surface.  Over time this gets worse and worse, more and more fragmented.  Every time you read a file of the disk the disk head has to reposition to pickup all these different fragments which slows down file access radically.  The ideal scenario is to have all files contiguous, no fragmentation, and have the most frequently used files around the centre of the disk to minimise average head movement time (seek time).  The defragmentation tool analyses and then defragments the disk for you and is available on the tools tab of the disk properties option (right click on your disk, select properties).  You need to defragment roughly every two to three months, more often if you install and reinstall a lot of programs and files.  It’s a good idea to run Error Check (also on the tools tab) and close all tasks and as many services as you can before defragmenting.  Files currently open or in use cannot be moved…

Check for BIOS updates – For an experienced overclocker BIOS updates are a no brainer as they usually fix performance holes or issues with the motherboard.  For most users we recommend if you have no known BIOS issues then do not update it.  Either way close all programs before flashing an update to the BIOS, should the BIOS flash fail, be interrupted, or get corrupted (and you would be surprised how easily this can happen!) then your PC will be dead and you will need a new BIOS chip.

Check for chipset and operating system updates – Often new drivers or windows updates can speed things up a little or a lot.  Windows Update is a blessing and a curse.  With Vista you are now able to do ALL updates with the Windows update tool, including many third party drivers.  Our usual recommendation is to leave it on Automatic, however, sometimes a new update can introduce instability or worse.  If this happens revert to the last Restore point.  If you are an experienced power user we recommend you manually run Windows Update and carefully select updates you know are comfortable with or know you need.

Easy performance boost – Vista’s ReadyBoost feature allows you to plug in a USB flash drive or a flash memory card and use its available capacity to cache frequently used files, augmenting the system file cache in main memory.  Though slower than main memory Flash memory is an awful lot faster than the hard disk and will speed up general file access markedly.  Even quite large Flash drives are now very inexpensive.

Restart regularly – Even large Enterprises and Government datacentres have a regular restart regime to clear down processes that have been executing memory for some time and refresh the operating systems own memory and programming state.  Any problems with stale resources or processes is compounded by possible memory leaks and memory fragmentation occurring over time (which happens in the same way as disks can get fragmented).  If you find your PC is getting slower the longer its left on you probably have some runaway process or processes eating up memory or cycles and you can either kill the processes or restart the whole machine.  If you are monitoring your process and memory utilisation as we discussed earlier you will have noticed this happening.  If it’s a problem deep in Windows that’s causing a performance problem over time then it’s unlikely you will be able to diagnose it and only a restart will fix it.  Generally you should be looking to restart your PC at least once a week.  We restart non critical desktops and servers daily, our long term benchmark tests can run for up to a month non-stop without a restart.  In the latter case we use a stripped down Windows build that we have tested as stable for at least a month.  Remember Hibernate or Standy shutdowns are NOT a reboot, only Shutdown or Restart.  Preferably do a cold reboot by shutting down and switching off completely and leaving for 10 minutes before powering on.  This will also reinitialise your BIOS and all PC hardware.

 

Alan Johnson

Stabilize the System by Removing Spyware

March 2nd, 2011 No comments

The installation of Spyware on the computer is initiated by visiting a website, downloading a mail, an attachment or just inadvertently clicking on a download you like that brings with it a hidden program such as Spyware. Once this Spyware is installed on your system it begins to go about its malicious business of collecting your personal information and waiting for you to access the Internet so it can mail it to its master. Since

spyware is designed to work in the background, you may never know of its existence until it is too late. This is why it is a good idea to install and run anti Spyware at regular intervals to detect the existence of Spyware as well as to remove it. Then the remnants will have to be removed from the system registry by running registry cleaner software such as Computer Spyware Remover or free Microsoft Spyware Adware remover software.

How Does The Registry Slow Down?

The system registry is constantly recording all the activity of the operating system including the Internet Explorer and the sites that it is accessing. Spyware being the busy program it is, is designed to be not only one that takes up a lot of the processor time by operating in the background but also one that delays the front-end programs and services.

All the activity is recorded in the registry. This makes the registry swell out of proportion. Therefore the system must be constantly scanned for Spyware and it removed using any of the free Spyware Adware Removal tools. Now the registry is constantly being accessed for information by the operating system. Every time the registry is requested for information it starts to scan the entire record for the information. As long as the registry has a few thousand entries, it will fetch the information fairly easily but when the registry grows by thousands of entries, that too useless information, it will slow down to a crawl. When this happens, it is definitely time for action.

Download Registry Cleaner And Anti Spyware

Microsoft Windows Spyware Free Download is one of the Spyware registry cleaner software that can be accessed from the Internet. Yahoo Spyware removal and Kazaa Spyware Remover are the other reliable registry Spyware cleaner software that can do a good job of deleting the Spyware from the registry and making the system run more efficiently. When the redundant information is removed from the registry, the registry has a lot of empty spaces.

This too can slow the system down. Some registry cleaners defragment the registry as well. This is the process of bringing the registry entries closer together by taking up the empty spaces. Using a free Spyware Adware removal utility will greatly improve the operating of the system at the same time stabilizing the operating system.

Arvind
http://www.articlesbase.com/software-articles/stabilize-the-system-by-removing-spyware-119192.html

How to Make Your Computer Working Faster?

February 27th, 2011 10 comments

If you want to have a faster computer and get rid of those sluggish problems and system 32 errors and restarts, you need to fix the registry errors with registry cleaner and keep the registry up to date.

Why do we need a registry cleaner?

A registry cleaner is a program that removes the invalid registry keys like the old entries, fragmented entries, embedded keys, and so on. These registry keys are unnecessary and you can still run the computer, but they will make the system slower and problems crop up frequently with such errors in the registry. By cleaning these keys the software keeps the registry error free and ensuring optimum performance of the computer.

How to choose a registry cleaner for Windows?

There are so many options for you to choose registry cleaners over the internet and what you need to do is to get the best of them. Here are some suggestions for you to choose a useful cleaner.

    * You need to download the registry cleaner for Windows, it means for the Windows version that you are using. For example, if you are using Windows XP as your operating system, you need to download a program that is specifically designed for Windows XP and then you can get the maximum benefit from the software.

 

    * You should always download a registry cleaning tool that lets you scan the registry manually as well as comes with schedule scanning feature. It will save your time as well as make the use of the software much easier.

 

    * The software must have the ability to back up and restore the registry that may be of great help in case there is a problem after the registry modified.

How to get the best free registry cleaner software?

You are never short of choices when it comes to registry cleaner. There are so many websites that are offering registry cleaning tools and some of them are available for free downloading. All you need to do is to select the best free registry cleaner and download it for you. There are some websites that are offering the trial version of the software, if you download that, you have to buy the software later to get the full utility after the trial period is over. Therefore, it is better to get the full version. Before making decision, you need to carefully read the specifications mentioned by the vendor at the website.

Author is an administrator and technical expert in the field of computer security and performance enhancing software like Registry Cleaner, Anti Spyware, and Anti Spam Filter. Visit our Home Page at http://www.PerfectOptimizer.com or Resource Center to read more about products.

JJY

Slow Running Computer?–speed it Up With Registry Cleaner Software

February 12th, 2011 6 comments

When a Windows computer has been used for some time it tends to slow down,freeze sometimes and occasionally even crash completely. It may take months or years depending on how much you use your machine but it will happen.

Why is this so? The reason is nearly always a corrupt registry which has become bloated with data and useless files. Every time you install or uninstall a program incompletely, fragments of the program will remain in the registry causing it to become choked with data after some time.

The registry is something which all Windows PCs have. It is basically a database of entries which the operating system uses to run the machine. When it becomes bloated with too many fragments of data the operating system has to find its way through all the excess entries to locate the data it needs to run the computer and programs. This causes a very noticeable slow down and balkiness in the operation of the machine.

The only way to correct this problem is to remove all the unwanted data entries from the registry. All windows PCs have a function called Regedit which is intended for just this purpose. You can access Regedit by clicking START-RUN then typing Regedit in the box. When you are ready to start using Regedit you must first back up your registry so that you can restore it if something goes wrong. This is done by clicking FILE then selecting EXPORT. Name the backup file so that you can find it and save to your desktop or elsewhere.

You can now proceed to go through the registry entries and remove any you do not want. When you examine the registry entries you will see that you are faced with a formidable task. Unless you really know what you are doing it will be obvious to you that you need help at this point. Just remove one wrong entry and you can completely disable the computer which we certainly do not want to do.

Fortunately help is readily available in the form of an online registry cleaner application which can do the job quickly and safely. A good registry repair utility will backup your registry then delete all unecessary entries from the registry. This will easily and safely clean the registry in a matter of minutes and return the computer to being the sweet running fast machine it was before the registry became corrupt.

We purchased several of the most popular registry cleaner applications and tested them to see which was best. We found that they vary greatly in ability to detect errors in the registry. The best registry cleaner applications could detect many more wrong entries than some of the others.

John Mowatt
http://www.articlesbase.com/computers-articles/slow-running-computerspeed-it-up-with-registry-cleaner-software-751759.html

Effects of Spyware on the Computer

February 9th, 2011 5 comments

If you have browsed the Internet for a substantial number of hours it is guaranteed that you have downloaded some sort of Spyware to your system, albeit inadvertently. That is the reason it is called Spyware. If it made itself known it would not be spying. Spyware is not illegal software. It is downloaded with the ‘permission’ of the user. Once the Spyware downloads and installs itself it begins, first of all, to consolidate itself on the machine. It does this by entering its information in multiple parts of the registry. These entries can only be removed with Spyware removal utilities and there are many free anti Spyware and Adware removal tools available to do a satisfactory job for you.

Effects On The Registry

A lot of add-on Internet Explorer tool bars are also Spyware. They constantly monitor the users browsing habits and the type of software that is installed and run on the computer. At times this may be helpful to the user as the relevant advertisements are directed to the browser. However, in the long run this Spyware will definitely slow down the system to a crawl. This malicious software must be removed from the system as soon as possible with free Adware and Spyware removal tools. Spyware is constantly making entries to the registry. This makes the registry grow out of proportion. Since the system has to refer to the registry multiple times in a session, the registry has to be scanned from the beginning every time. Considering that the registry has tens of thousands of records it may take a very long time to scan and locate the information being sought. Spyware keeps adding junk to the registry and this slows the system down.

Removal Technique

Spyware can be removed from the Computer with the use of anti-Spyware utilities. However, these utilities will only uninstall the Spyware from the operating system. The anti-Spyware utilities are not designed to go in to the registry hives and make changes. Going into the registry and removing the entries is very specialized operations and cannot be clubbed with some other software or program. Removing the Spyware entries from the registry is very important. Because once the Spyware determines that the exe file has been removed it will kick in from the registry and reinstall the exe from the Internet site it came from initially. Therefore removing the entries with a registry cleaner is very important. Free Microsoft Spyware removal tools and PC registry Cleaner are good software that can remove all redundant and bad entries from the system registry.

Qualities Of A Good Registry Cleaner

A good free Spyware removal utility will have three facilities such as a registry backup function a restore function and a scan and repair function. It is important that the spyware cleaner make a good backup of the registry just in case the system fails to function properly after the computer clean up.

Arvind
http://www.articlesbase.com/security-articles/effects-of-spyware-on-the-computer-68890.html

Routes of Spyware Infection

February 6th, 2011 5 comments

Unlike a virus or a worm, Spyware does not spread from computer to computer. An infect system will not attempt to transmit the Spyware to another computer. The Spyware will reside covertly in the operating system and load itself to the system memory and run in the background carrying out its deadly task of compiling user information and personal data such as usernames and passwords as well as credit card information. Spyware, like a virus or worm, will make entries in various parts of the registry in order to operate. This slows the system down and must be cleaned with a Spyware Virus removal tool from time to time in addition to using registry cleaner utilities to secure the system.

What Are The Sources Of Spyware

Spyware mainly downloads itself. It means it comes from the Internet. However, other sources such as storage devices and local area networks are also a contributor to this malicious software. It is natural for users not to install any program or utility if they feel that the installation will disrupt the performance of the system. This is shy it is necessary for Spyware to deceive the user in order to be downloaded onto the system. Spyware does this by attaching itself to a download or by tricking the user into installing software it is a part of. The ultimate result can be pure disaster. Therefore it is important to install computer Spyware removal utilities on the system to beef up the system security and carry out regular maintenance of the registry with software such as free Microsoft Spyware removal and computer Spyware removal tools.

How Does Spyware Slow Down The Registry?

The registry is the backbone of the system. It is the central database of the operating system. The registry is constantly scanned by the operating system for information that is used to run programs on the computer. Every time the registry is scanned it has to be scanned from the beginning. Going through the tens of thousands of entries in the registry can take a long time. Since all activity on the computer is recorded in the registry even the Spyware activity is recorded. This makes the registry grow and swell out of proportion making the scan time even longer. Moreover, every time the Spyware entries in the registry are hit by the scan they kick in and activate some spying activity. This further slows down the system. Spyware entries in the registry can only be removed with premium or free Spyware Adware removal tools software such as Yahoo Spyware removal utility and not with just any Spyware scanning program.

Arvind
http://www.articlesbase.com/security-articles/routes-of-spyware-infection-68895.html