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Hi,
I've used all versions of Windows for many years. Since buying a new machine
withe Vista installed I have one complaint with it.
The hard drive seems to never stop. I can turn on the machine from cold and
just do literally nothing at all and the hard drive will still be rattling
away 45 minutes later.
I've been on to Hewlet Packard and got no joy from them.
Is it index system on Vista constantly updating? It's really getting on my
nerves listening to it. There can't be any reason why the HD needs to be
operating virtually all the time like this,
Any ideas?
In hope,
Alan.
I don't notice this, because I leave my desktop on all the time, so it gets
to do the grunt work (indexing, virus scanning, etc.) during the night when
I'm not using it.
"Alan" <alan111@ntlworld.com> wrote in message
news:eQbuIo26HHA.4736@TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl...
> Hi,
> I've used all versions of Windows for many years. Since buying a new
> machine withe Vista installed I have one complaint with it.
> The hard drive seems to never stop. I can turn on the machine from cold
> and just do literally nothing at all and the hard drive will still be
> rattling away 45 minutes later.
> I've been on to Hewlet Packard and got no joy from them.
> Is it index system on Vista constantly updating? It's really getting on my
> nerves listening to it. There can't be any reason why the HD needs to be
> operating virtually all the time like this,
> Any ideas?
> In hope,
> Alan.
"Alan" <alan111@ntlworld.com> wrote in message
news:eQbuIo26HHA.4736@TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl...
> Hi,
> I've used all versions of Windows for many years. Since buying a new
> machine withe Vista installed I have one complaint with it.
> The hard drive seems to never stop. I can turn on the machine from cold
> and just do literally nothing at all and the hard drive will still be
> rattling away 45 minutes later.
> I've been on to Hewlet Packard and got no joy from them.
> Is it index system on Vista constantly updating? It's really getting on my
> nerves listening to it. There can't be any reason why the HD needs to be
> operating virtually all the time like this,
> Any ideas?
> In hope,
> Alan.
If it's a new machine it's probably still indexing the files for faster
searching.
Chill, it's just doing it's thing. Indexing mostly, but also Superfetch,
startup optimisation and defragging at various times.
It'll get much better after a week or so when everything has settled down.
Meanwhile, the indexing runs at the lowest I/O and CPU priorities, so
shouldn't slow down your work.
And if it is not a new machine? I have the same experience and I have been
running mine for a month or more. I see constant spikes in CPU usage usually
associated with a display program but when I stop the process it continues to
run and locks up when I play movies. 3Ghz dualcore AMD.
I know Vista is great but do you have any REAL answers that might help a
person not wanting to spend all day in chat rooms to figure out if his HP is
a dog or is Vista the problem. Could it be Defender? I have Norton so I
shut Defender down and it seemed to help with the DVDs locking up. And now
it is not so irritating.
Soorry for going on so but it ahs been a month now and my old Pentium 3 with
Windows ME was better.
--
ACK
"Dave" wrote:
> I don't notice this, because I leave my desktop on all the time, so it gets
> to do the grunt work (indexing, virus scanning, etc.) during the night when
> I'm not using it.
>
>
>
>
> "Alan" <alan111@ntlworld.com> wrote in message
> news:eQbuIo26HHA.4736@TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl...
> > Hi,
> > I've used all versions of Windows for many years. Since buying a new
> > machine withe Vista installed I have one complaint with it.
> > The hard drive seems to never stop. I can turn on the machine from cold
> > and just do literally nothing at all and the hard drive will still be
> > rattling away 45 minutes later.
> > I've been on to Hewlet Packard and got no joy from them.
> > Is it index system on Vista constantly updating? It's really getting on my
> > nerves listening to it. There can't be any reason why the HD needs to be
> > operating virtually all the time like this,
> > Any ideas?
> > In hope,
> > Alan.
>
>
Thanks to all of you for the replies.
It's not a new machine, I've had it since March.
I don't want to leave the machine running twenty-four hours a day.
Why does it take up to three hours for the HD to stop running furiously
every time I start it up?
Surely the indexing system doesn't start from scratch every time you switch
it on, or does it?
I can be sitting in the next room watching the TV and suddenly I hear the HD
roaring away like it was doing a virus scan. This is with nothing at all
open or running, just the desktop showing.
Something must be running in the background.
I've been give a complete blank from the shop I bought it from.
Can anyone give me any advice as to what this could be?
I can supply screenshots of the performance monitor etc if necessary,
Still in hope, Alan.
"Steve Thackery" <thack@nowhere.net> wrote in message
news:uLWN1S66HHA.5984@TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl...
> Chill, it's just doing it's thing. Indexing mostly, but also Superfetch,
> startup optimisation and defragging at various times.
>
> It'll get much better after a week or so when everything has settled down.
> Meanwhile, the indexing runs at the lowest I/O and CPU priorities, so
> shouldn't slow down your work.
>
> Steve
>
Try to look at your "defragmented by Vista" drive with, let's say, Windows
2000's Defragmenter. You'll understand that the red lines that dominate the
image represent your defragmented files. And why we aren't shown any
imagistic progress of what's being done to our files while defragmenting,
also.
Seriously foks my machine has been running now for almost an hour. By the
way why all the updates. I seem to get one or two a day?
--
ACK
"ACK" wrote:
> And if it is not a new machine? I have the same experience and I have been
> running mine for a month or more. I see constant spikes in CPU usage usually
> associated with a display program but when I stop the process it continues to
> run and locks up when I play movies. 3Ghz dualcore AMD.
> I know Vista is great but do you have any REAL answers that might help a
> person not wanting to spend all day in chat rooms to figure out if his HP is
> a dog or is Vista the problem. Could it be Defender? I have Norton so I
> shut Defender down and it seemed to help with the DVDs locking up. And now
> it is not so irritating.
> Soorry for going on so but it ahs been a month now and my old Pentium 3 with
> Windows ME was better.
> --
> ACK
>
>
> "Dave" wrote:
>
> > I don't notice this, because I leave my desktop on all the time, so it gets
> > to do the grunt work (indexing, virus scanning, etc.) during the night when
> > I'm not using it.
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > "Alan" <alan111@ntlworld.com> wrote in message
> > news:eQbuIo26HHA.4736@TK2MSFTNGP06.phx.gbl...
> > > Hi,
> > > I've used all versions of Windows for many years. Since buying a new
> > > machine withe Vista installed I have one complaint with it.
> > > The hard drive seems to never stop. I can turn on the machine from cold
> > > and just do literally nothing at all and the hard drive will still be
> > > rattling away 45 minutes later.
> > > I've been on to Hewlet Packard and got no joy from them.
> > > Is it index system on Vista constantly updating? It's really getting on my
> > > nerves listening to it. There can't be any reason why the HD needs to be
> > > operating virtually all the time like this,
> > > Any ideas?
> > > In hope,
> > > Alan.
> >
> >
"ACK" <ACK@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:F8561BEA-7B98-4D8A-91D1-26BD3E934694@microsoft.com...
> Seriously foks my machine has been running now for almost an hour. By the
> way why all the updates. I seem to get one or two a day?