Windows PCs don’t have to slow down over time. Whether your
PC has gradually become slower or it suddenly ground to
a halt a few minutes ago, there could be quite a few reasons for
that slowness.
Windows PCs don’t have to slow down over time. Whether your
PC has gradually become slower or it suddenly ground to
a halt a few minutes ago, there could be quite a few reasons for
that slowness.
If you want to
clean up your PC the easy way, CleanMyPC is
a great tool to get the job done easily, and it will even keep your
computer clean automatically.
Unlike the competition, it also includes great tools like
a Clean Uninstaller, to get rid of applications and clean
up the junk that they leave behind. All with the click of a button.</
div>

Unlike the competition, it also includes great tools like
a Clean Uninstaller, to get rid of applications and clean
up the junk that they leave behind. All with the click of a button.</
div>
Find Resource-Hungry Programs
Your PC is running slow because something is using
up those resources. If it’s suddenly running slower, a runaway process
might be using 99% of your CPU resources, for example. Or, an
application might be experiencing a memory leak and using a large
amount of memory, causing your PC to swap to disk. Alternately, an
application might be using the disk a lot, causing other applications to
slow down when they need to load data from or save it to the disk.</
div>
To find out, open the Task
Manager. You can right-click your taskbar and select the “Task
Manager” option or press Ctrl+Shift+Escape to open it. On Windows 8,
8.1, and 10, the new Task Manager provides an upgraded
interface that color-codes applications using a lot of resources. Click
the “CPU,” “Memory,” and “Disk” headers to sort the list by the
applications using the most resources. If any application is using too
much resources, you might want to close it normally — if you can’t,
select it here and click “End Task” to force it to close.
Your PC is running slow because something is using
up those resources. If it’s suddenly running slower, a runaway process
might be using 99% of your CPU resources, for example. Or, an
application might be experiencing a memory leak and using a large
amount of memory, causing your PC to swap to disk. Alternately, an
application might be using the disk a lot, causing other applications to
slow down when they need to load data from or save it to the disk.</
div>
To find out, open the Task
Manager. You can right-click your taskbar and select the “Task
Manager” option or press Ctrl+Shift+Escape to open it. On Windows 8,
8.1, and 10, the new Task Manager provides an upgraded
interface that color-codes applications using a lot of resources. Click
the “CPU,” “Memory,” and “Disk” headers to sort the list by the
applications using the most resources. If any application is using too
much resources, you might want to close it normally — if you can’t,
select it here and click “End Task” to force it to close.

Close System Tray Programs
Many applications tend to run
in the system tray, or notification area. These applications often launch
at startup and stay running in the background but remain hidden
behind the up arrow icon at the bottom-right corner of your
screen. Click the up arrow icon near the system
tray, right-click any applications you don’t need running in the
background, and close them to free up resources.
Many applications tend to run
in the system tray, or notification area. These applications often launch
at startup and stay running in the background but remain hidden
behind the up arrow icon at the bottom-right corner of your
screen. Click the up arrow icon near the system
tray, right-click any applications you don’t need running in the
background, and close them to free up resources.

Disable Startup Programme
Reduce Animations
Windows uses quite a few animations, and those animations can
make your PC seem a bit slower. For example, Windows can minimize
and maximize windows instantly if you disable the associated
animations.
To disable animations, press Windows Key +
X or right-click the Start button and select “System.” Click “Advanced
System Settings” on the left and click the “Settings” button under
Performance. Choose “Adjust for best performance” under Visual
Effects to disable all the animations, or select “Custom” and disable
the individual animations you don’t want to see. For example, uncheck
“Animate windows when minimizing and maximizing” to disable the
minimize and maximize animations.

Lighten Your Web Browser</
h3
There’s a good chance you use your web browser a lot, so your
web browser may just be a bit slow. It’s a good idea to use as few
browser extensions, or add-ons, as possible — those slow down your
web browser and cause it to use more memory.
Go into your web browser’s
Extensions or Add-ons manager and remove add-ons you don’t
need. You should also consider enabling click-to-play
plug-ins. Preventing Flash and other content from loading will
prevent unimportant Flash content from using CPU time.

Scan for Malware and Adware</
h3>
There’s also a chance your computer
is slow because malicious software is slowing it down and running in
the background. This may not be flat-out malware — it may be
software that interferes with your web browsing to track it and add
additional advertisements, for example.
To be extra safe, scan your computer with an antivirus program.
You should also scan it withMalwarebytes, which catches a lot of “potentially
unwanted programs” (PUPs) that most antivirus programs tend to
ignore. These programs try to sneak onto your computer when you
install other software, and you almost certainly don’t want them.</
div>
</
div>
Free Up Disk Space
If your hard drive is almost completely full, your computer may
run noticeably slower. You want to leave your computer some room to
work on your hard drive. Follow our guide to freeing up
space on your Windows PC to free up room. You don’t need
any third-party software — just running the Disk Cleanup tool included
in Windows can help quite a bit.
Defragment Your Hard Disk</
h3>
Defragmenting your hard disk
actually shouldn’t be necessary on modern versions of Windows. It’ll
automatically defragment mechanical hard drives in the background.
Solid-state drives don’t really need traditional defragmentation,
although modern versions of Windows will “optimize” them — and
that’s fine.
You shouldn’t worry about defragmentation most of the
time. However, if you do have a mechanical hard drive and you’ve
just put a lot of files on the drive — for example, copying a huge
database or gigabytes of PC game files — those files might be
defragmented because Windows hasn’t gotten around to
defragmenting them yet. In this situation, you might want to open the
disk defragmenter tool and perform a scan to see if you need to run a
manual defrag program.
</
div>
Uninstall Programs You Don’t Use
Open the Control Panel, find the list
of installed programs, and uninstall programs you don’t use and don’t
need from your PC. This can help speed your PC up, as those
programs might include background processes, autostart entries,
system services, context menu entries, and other things that can slow
down your PC. It’ll also save room on your hard drive and improve
system security — for example, you definitely shouldn’t have Java installed if you’re not using it.
Reset Your PC / Reinstall
Windows
If the other tips here didn’t fix your problem, the one timeless
solution to fix Windows problems — aside from rebooting your PC, of
course — is getting a fresh Windows installation.
On modern versions of Windows —
that is, Windows 8, 8.1, and 10 — it’s easier to get a fresh Windows
installation than ever. You don’t have to get Windows installation
media and reinstall Windows. Instead, you can
simply use the “Reset your PC” feature built into Windows
to get a new, fresh Windows system. This is similar to reinstalling
Windows and will wipe your installed programs and system settings
while keeping your files.
If your
PC is still using a mechanical hard drive, upgrading to a
solid-state drive — or just ensuring your next PC has an SSD
— will offer you a dramatic performance improvement, too. In an age
where most people won’t notice faster CPUs and graphics
processors, solid-state storage will offer the single
biggest boost in overall system perfo

Free Up Disk Space
If your hard drive is almost completely full, your computer may
run noticeably slower. You want to leave your computer some room to
work on your hard drive. Follow our guide to freeing up
space on your Windows PC to free up room. You don’t need
any third-party software — just running the Disk Cleanup tool included
in Windows can help quite a bit.

Defragment Your Hard Disk</
h3>
Defragmenting your hard disk
actually shouldn’t be necessary on modern versions of Windows. It’ll
automatically defragment mechanical hard drives in the background.
Solid-state drives don’t really need traditional defragmentation,
although modern versions of Windows will “optimize” them — and
that’s fine.
You shouldn’t worry about defragmentation most of the
time. However, if you do have a mechanical hard drive and you’ve
just put a lot of files on the drive — for example, copying a huge
database or gigabytes of PC game files — those files might be
defragmented because Windows hasn’t gotten around to
defragmenting them yet. In this situation, you might want to open the
disk defragmenter tool and perform a scan to see if you need to run a
manual defrag program.
</
div>
Uninstall Programs You Don’t Use
Open the Control Panel, find the list
of installed programs, and uninstall programs you don’t use and don’t
need from your PC. This can help speed your PC up, as those
programs might include background processes, autostart entries,
system services, context menu entries, and other things that can slow
down your PC. It’ll also save room on your hard drive and improve
system security — for example, you definitely shouldn’t have Java installed if you’re not using it.
Reset Your PC / Reinstall
Windows
If the other tips here didn’t fix your problem, the one timeless
solution to fix Windows problems — aside from rebooting your PC, of
course — is getting a fresh Windows installation.
On modern versions of Windows —
that is, Windows 8, 8.1, and 10 — it’s easier to get a fresh Windows
installation than ever. You don’t have to get Windows installation
media and reinstall Windows. Instead, you can
simply use the “Reset your PC” feature built into Windows
to get a new, fresh Windows system. This is similar to reinstalling
Windows and will wipe your installed programs and system settings
while keeping your files.
If your
PC is still using a mechanical hard drive, upgrading to a
solid-state drive — or just ensuring your next PC has an SSD
— will offer you a dramatic performance improvement, too. In an age
where most people won’t notice faster CPUs and graphics
processors, solid-state storage will offer the single
biggest boost in overall system perfo

Uninstall Programs You Don’t Use
Open the Control Panel, find the list
of installed programs, and uninstall programs you don’t use and don’t
need from your PC. This can help speed your PC up, as those
programs might include background processes, autostart entries,
system services, context menu entries, and other things that can slow
down your PC. It’ll also save room on your hard drive and improve
system security — for example, you definitely shouldn’t have Java installed if you’re not using it.

Reset Your PC / Reinstall Windows
If the other tips here didn’t fix your problem, the one timeless
solution to fix Windows problems — aside from rebooting your PC, of
course — is getting a fresh Windows installation.
On modern versions of Windows —
that is, Windows 8, 8.1, and 10 — it’s easier to get a fresh Windows
installation than ever. You don’t have to get Windows installation
media and reinstall Windows. Instead, you can
simply use the “Reset your PC” feature built into Windows
to get a new, fresh Windows system. This is similar to reinstalling
Windows and will wipe your installed programs and system settings
while keeping your files.

If your
PC is still using a mechanical hard drive, upgrading to a
solid-state drive — or just ensuring your next PC has an SSD
— will offer you a dramatic performance improvement, too. In an age
where most people won’t notice faster CPUs and graphics
processors, solid-state storage will offer the single
biggest boost in overall system perfo
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