I have a home-built that suddenly started running dead-slow the other night when I restarted it.
Specs:
ECS K7S5A Motherboard with AMD 2400 Athlon-XP.
768 MB RAM
Nvidia M440 video card
Wireless D-Link card.
It will boot to safe mode, but again runs dead-slow, as it does in normal mode. All of this happened after I tried to boot Linux from a jump drive after installing from another machine. Removed the jump drive, and started having issues. Any thoughts?
- Follow via:
- RSS
- Email Alert
Question
Answers (4)
0
Votes
linux
what version of linux is it cause some of the drivers may have copied over to windows due poor installation, was it a live cd version? or possibly a virus was attached to the linux os.
18th Aug 2009
Replies
Nothing could have been riding on the Linux install, since I have it running perfectly from the same install disc on another machine. It was Ubuntu 9.04.
dpalsen
18th Aug 2009
0
Votes
Any difference in hard drive capacity?
Did the GNU/Linux distribution copy files to your hard drive or manage your hard drive in any other manner? Most GNU/Linux distributions will ask for swap space (virtual memory) to use, so I'm wondering if it created this swap space on your hard drive. Can you see any difference in your hard drive capacity at all?
It could be bad RAM, but I find it highly unlikely that it would go bad at the same time you were playing with a USB GNU/Linux.
It could be bad RAM, but I find it highly unlikely that it would go bad at the same time you were playing with a USB GNU/Linux.
18th Aug 2009
0
Votes
few things
how are you on hard drive space?
run task manager and see if anything is eating up your memory - Symantec AV can make your system drag. Have you installed/changed any new drivers or hardware?
run task manager and see if anything is eating up your memory - Symantec AV can make your system drag. Have you installed/changed any new drivers or hardware?
Updated - 18th Aug 2009
Replies
Nothing new, no symantec or anything, and nothing Linux could have done, since it was a simple boot from a flash drive.
dpalsen
18th Aug 2009
0
Votes
Found it
When I got home tonight, I tried a reset of the BIOS to the failsafes. That fixed the problem. Apparently when I booted into Linux, it reset something in the BIOS (Don't know what). Thanks to everyone who helped.
18th Aug 2009
Replies
Go into the BIOS and photograph the pages then re-install the LINUX system/jump drive and see what it changed in the BIOS. That is if you want the answer.
Peconet Tietokoneet
19th Aug 2009

































