NitroZip
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After an hour or so of normal, or even no use, windows 8.1 becomes unresponsive. I can move the mouse around, but when I click on something, it hangs and the a few minutes later frees up, the freezes again. When I boot into safe mode I don't have the problem. I have done multiple scans with various software, and with Microsoft diagnoses software. All have found and fixed errors, but didn't fix the problem. My hard drive activity shows maxed out constantly once the problem starts, but not much data being transfered. Anyone have any ideas?
Solution
Then perform a clean boot .... instructions here http://support.microsoft.com/kb/929135/When I boot into safe mode I don't have the problem
Select your product at the top and follow the instructions.
See if the problem persists in a Clean Boot environment. If not then the work starts by beginning to turn back on various services that you've disabled and then various startup items until you are able to zero in on the offending program(s) and or service(s).
Trouble
Noob Whisperer
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Hello and welcome to the forum.
I would suggest, first backing up all your critical data. A system image using something like AOEMI or something similar is a good first step.
Then I would perform a disk diagnostic using the native Check Disk Utility.
Open an administrative command prompt and type.
chkdsk C: /R
and hit enter
Answer "Y" when prompted and reboot.
Let it run all five stages upon reboot.
Examine the results in Event Viewer paying particular attention to any bad bits that are found.
Then I would likely use the native Defrag Utility to optimize the drive, giving it two consecutive rounds with a reboot in between. Feel free to ignore the 0% fragmented information that is generally noted within the tool and manually run it twice anyway.
I would suggest, first backing up all your critical data. A system image using something like AOEMI or something similar is a good first step.
Then I would perform a disk diagnostic using the native Check Disk Utility.
Open an administrative command prompt and type.
chkdsk C: /R
and hit enter
Answer "Y" when prompted and reboot.
Let it run all five stages upon reboot.
Examine the results in Event Viewer paying particular attention to any bad bits that are found.
Then I would likely use the native Defrag Utility to optimize the drive, giving it two consecutive rounds with a reboot in between. Feel free to ignore the 0% fragmented information that is generally noted within the tool and manually run it twice anyway.
Trouble
Noob Whisperer
- Joined
- Nov 30, 2009
- Messages
- 13,722
Then perform a clean boot .... instructions here http://support.microsoft.com/kb/929135/When I boot into safe mode I don't have the problem
Select your product at the top and follow the instructions.
See if the problem persists in a Clean Boot environment. If not then the work starts by beginning to turn back on various services that you've disabled and then various startup items until you are able to zero in on the offending program(s) and or service(s).
NitroZip
New Member
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- Nov 23, 2014
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- #8
After sitting for awhile, disk usage has climbed to 16% but only shows a few processes using .1 MB/s, CPU usage going from 1-5% memory staying at 13%,. System started freezing. I let it sit awhile longer, disk activity dropped and became stable.
Trouble
Noob Whisperer
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That hardly seems remarkable enough to result in system freezing. Are you sure you are showing processes "for all users".After sitting for awhile, disk usage has climbed to 16% but only shows a few processes using .1 MB/s, CPU usage going from 1-5% memory. System started freezing
Maybe take a look at the Performance tab and use the link at the bottom to launch "Resource Monitor" then have a look at the CPU, Memory, Disk and Network tabs and see if you can spot anything unusual going on.
Did you install and run MalwareBytes and is it running currently in the system tray. If not please install the free trial version from here https://www.malwarebytes.org/mwb-download/I have done multiple scans with various software
The trial version runs in real time and might provide some insight into anything that may be happening in the background.
Trouble
Noob Whisperer
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OK, keep an eye on it and keep us posted as to how you decide to proceed.
Another tool that may help you examine, in a bit more detail, what might be going on is called Process Explorer and you can grab a download from here http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/sysinternals/bb896653.aspx
Another tool that may help you examine, in a bit more detail, what might be going on is called Process Explorer and you can grab a download from here http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/sysinternals/bb896653.aspx
Trouble
Noob Whisperer
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yes.... basically the same way you disabled them, only I would suggest starting with the non-microsoft services that you disabled one at a time. Take some time to examine them and use some common sense as to whether or not you really feel you need them running at all in the first place.
Then do the same thing with the start up items.
You will need to reboot after each item you re-enable and then give it some time to appreciate the potential consequence.
Good luck and good hunting.
Then do the same thing with the start up items.
You will need to reboot after each item you re-enable and then give it some time to appreciate the potential consequence.
Good luck and good hunting.
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