We've all had this experience. You're online, surfing the information superhighway, and then all of a sudden, your computer slows down. What the heck is going on? After all, you've installed a broadband connection, and you thought your internet access was going to be lightning fast since you dumped that dialup garbage.
Finally, download complete. You've arrived at the webpage you were eagerly waiting for, and then you click on a link on the page, and all of a sudden, you've got 3 different offers for Viagra flashing in front of your face, and five pop-ups showing women in various states of undress in advertisements for XXX rated sites. The naked photos are a welcome distraction, but what happened? How did your internet access suddenly get hijacked?
The answer is simple: spyware. ?Spyware? refers to a class of sophisticated computer programs that are surreptitiously installed on your computer by clever internet marketing geeks so that they can deliver advertising directly to you and take control of your machine, which can slow down or sometimes completely stall your internet access temporarily. Spyware evolved sometime around the year 2000, right around the time that email began losing its luster as an effective marketing tool. Faced with declining responses to their spam, top nerds from around the globe joined together and invented a new way to throw advertisements for mortgages, discounted brand names, and cleavage right in your face so that you wouldn't be able to hide behind your spam filter.
How does spyware get onto your computer? Spyware gets installed on your machine many different ways, and savvy programmers are coming up with new ways to infect you every day. One way they do it is by bundling it with legitimate software programs that you install on your machine. You may have ordered or downloaded some sort of shareware or other software for a legitimate purpose that had spyware attached to it. So, when you installed the software, you installed the spyware along with it. Sometimes, anti-spyware software is actually spyware itself!
The most common way that spyware is installed on your computer is by direct download from a website you're visiting, unbeknownst to you. How does this happen? Well, as soon as you arrive at the website, the website begins transferring the spyware to your computer. Internet Explorer is supposed to protect you against unauthorized downloads. This is no problem for spyware developers, as they know how to attack the holes in your firewalls and anti-virus software. Also, they often send a pop-up box to you while you're online that appears to be an Internet Explorer dialog box and says something like ?your browser resources are low, click here to optimize your access,? and then when you click, spyware is downloaded to your machine.
Once installed on your machine, how does spyware actually work? How does it deliver its insidious, unwelcome contest to your computer? Well, it infects your operating system (Windows, for example), and then begins to direct your internet usage once you go online. It delivers pop-up ads to your browser. Sometimes, it redirects you to the website of its choice when you type an address into your browser. For example, you type in the web address for Yahoo, and the spyware then tosses you over to a website for a company that the spyware author is promoting.
The most annoying and potentially dangerous function of spyware is that it keeps a record of all of the websites you're visiting as you're surfing the net, and then it sends this information back to the spyware company so they can then send you targeted advertisements that match your tastes. Sometimes, spyware is used purely for criminal purposes, such as stealing your credit card information or social security number whenever you enter this information into an order form or email form so that it can be transmitted back to the hacker. The hacker then uses your credit card number for a few days, and maybe uses your social security number to temporarily hijack your financial identity. This is known as identity theft, and it has become much more prevalent during the past several years.
To protect yourself, you can install legitimate spyware protection software that can spot these programs and delete them from your hard drive. One of the most popular spyware programs is Adaware. For AOL users, AOL comes with a spyware detection program that you can use. I recommend that you call your internet service provider, talk to their technical support staff, and ask them which software program they recommend for detecting and deleting spyware from your computer.
Why Is My Computer So Slow
Let's start with the symptoms. A computer works perfectly fine except for the start-up, which takes forever and destroys the user's mood at the very start, thus ruining his whole computer experience after that. So he asks, "WHY IS MY COMPUTER SO SLOW?" The answer is start-up overload. Some programs, when they are installed, are automatically set to run during start-up, so when the computer boots there'll be too many programs on queue, waiting for their turn to start running. This process won't give way for the user to use the computer until all programs on queue have been started.
Now a user notices that his settings have been changed - he doesn't recall ever changing them; his internet connection is too slow; and also his computer lags every so often. So he asks, "WHY IS MY COMPUTER SO SLOW?" A likely problem with symptoms like these is that the computer has been infiltrated by spyware. People get spyware from free downloads, websites, and even from e-mails. Spyware may alter system settings and give third parties access to the computer. Spyware also sends out information about the computer, even the user's browsing habits. It uses the computer's Internet connection to do these, which explains the slow internet connection.
And now a user encounters the BSOD (Blue Screen Of Death); He also experiences crashing and hanging of his applications; and on top of that he experiences slow booting, slow shutdown, and a slow system, generally. So he asks, "WHY IS MY COMPUTER SO SLOW?" Facing symptoms like these, it is likely that there is a registry error or registry conflict. As users install programs into their computer, their registry are sometimes changed, depending on the needs of the program, therefore causing registry conflicts in the future - say one of the programs need the registry to be this way, but the other program needs it to be that way, thus the registry conflict, which explains the crashing and hanging of the user's applications.
What if a user notices that as he runs more and more programs simultaneously his system gets slower and slower, and sometimes he encounters messages telling him to close some programs in order to run another program? Symptoms like these suggest that the virtual memory is running low; for a computer to operate it needs space to store temporary data; space for the system to work about. This space is called the virtual memory. Having too many applications running at the same time would fill this up, causing the system to slow down, as the system would have difficulty running on such little space.
This time a user simply notices that his system is running significantly slower than it did when it was new. He diagnosed his computer and none of the above came out as the culprits. So now he asks, "WHY IS MY COMPUTER SO SLOW?" A situation like this suggests that it is time to run a defragmentation. Computer users occasionally add files, and delete files. This causes your current files to be scattered around in your hard drive. At early stages the slowing effect would not be noticeable, but as this continues further it will become apparent, as the system would take more time searching for the needed files. Running a defragmentation would sort and arrange the files, therefore restoring the system's former speed.
Both Jim Pretin & Kelly Purden are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
Jim Pretin has sinced written about articles on various topics from Insurance, Medicine and Homeopathic Remedies. Jim Pretin is the proprietor of , a service that helps programmers create email forms.. Jim Pretin's top article generates over 33100 views. to your Favourites.
Kelly Purden has sinced written about articles on various topics from Flirting Tips, Registry Cleaner and Computers and The Internet. Do you ask yourself ? You can learn the exact problem and FIX it today at. Kelly Purden's top article generates over 246000 views. to your Favourites.
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