traag afsluiten

Status
Niet open voor verdere reacties.

ruud1980

Gebruiker
Lid geworden
28 jan 2005
Berichten
294
hallo

ik gebruik winxp
opstarten gaat wel maar afsluiten isn tergend langzaam
het duurt bijna een minuut eer de pc uitgaat
is hier iets voor??

bvd
mvg ruud
 
Als je naar het Taakbeheer (TaskManager) gaat kan je vanboven ergens op klikken en dan shut down. Dit sluit de pc snel maar veilig af. Je moet wel zeker zijn dat je word document dat openstaat ofzo is opgeslagen, want daar loopt hij gewoon over.
 
ik heb dit geprobeerd maar dit bleek ook niet de oplossing
 
bedankt voor de reactie

ik heb dit geprobeerd en dan krijg ik een dosscherm te zien met een cursor en meer niet ??
 
Geplaatst door ruud1980
bedankt voor de reactie

ik heb dit geprobeerd en dan krijg ik een dosscherm te zien met een cursor en meer niet ??

Ik denk dat je dan iets niet goed doet.

start>uitvoeren>typen regedit>en je komt in het register.
 
Foto is waarschijnlijk te groot.
De grote mag maximaal: 102400 bytes zijn
 
SHUTDOWN WORKS, BUT IT’S REAL SLOW
If it appears that Win XP is not shutting down, give it some time. Some users report a minute or longer for shutdown to visibly start. Generally, this is a consequence of software that is running when shutdown is attempted. It also may have something to do with particular hardware. If you experience this problem, be sure to close all running programs before attempting shutdown and see if this solves your problem. If so, then you can determine, by trial and error, which program(s) are involved.


Newsgroup correspondent “Sarah” provided one specific solution for this. In Control Panel | Administrative Tools | Services, stop the Nvidia Driver Helper service. (You can also get this by launching SERVICES.MSC from a Run box.) Many other newsgroup participants quickly confirmed that this solved this “extremely slow shutdown” problem for them (it’s the most successful solution for this problem to date). According to correspondent Gan Ming Teik, downloading and installing the new version 23.11 Nvidia driver also solves this problem.


Correspondent Ron Spruell found that disabling the Terminal Services service reduced his shutdown time from over 2 minutes (hanging at the “Windows is shutting down” screen) to about 10 seconds. To disable Terminal Services, follow the steps in the prior paragraph for launching SERVICES.MSC. Please note that Terminal Services is required in Windows XP for running Remote Assistance, Fast User Switching, and (in XP Pro) Remote Desktop.


Correspondent Graeme J.W. Smith reported a more obscure cause of slow shutdown: In Win XP Professional, the Group Policy Editor has a security option to clear the pagefile at system shutdown. The same setting also forces the hibernation file to be wiped at shutdown. These processes take long enough that users may think that shutdown has hung. To change the setting, click Start | Run, type GPEDIT.MSC, click OK. Drill down to Computer Configuration | Windows Settings | Security Settings | Local Policies | Security Options. In the right pane, find “Shutdown: Clear virtual memory pagefile.” NOTE: Since someone actually has to have set this policy, the problem will be pretty rare, but is worth mentioning. However, Forum participant “roadrunner” reported that the personal security app Privacy Eraser automatically enables “Clear virtual memory pagefile,” and, therefore, may be the cause of a slow shutdown.


The Gear Software Security Service (GEARSEC.EXE), which enables iTunes for Windows to read and burn CDs, has been reported by many users to cause Windows XP to hang at the “Windows is shutting down” screen for as long as 20-30 seconds. WORK-AROUND: Stop the service prior to shutdown. One way to to this (suggested by “Thornburgh”) is to create a batch file with the one line net stop gearsecurity. You can either launch this batch file manually, or (in Win XP Professional) use GPEDIT.MSC) to specify this batch file as the shutdown script (under Computer Configuration | Windows Settings | Scripts | Shutdown). Gear Software’s forum has a thread on this issue here. (Tip from correspondent “Andy”)


MS-MVP Gary Thorn discovered that the Event Log can slow down Win XP shutdown. Disabling event logging removed the slowdown. If this works for you, then the real troubleshooting begins: finding out, by trial and error, what item that is being logged is causing the actual slowdown. (In Gary’s case, the Telephony service was causing the problem.) To disable the Event Log, launch the Services console as detailed in No. 2 above, and disable Event Log (right-click on Event Log, click Properties, under Startup Type select “Disabled”).

bron:http://aumha.org/win5/a/shtdwnxp.htm
 
Laatst bewerkt:
Status
Niet open voor verdere reacties.
Terug
Bovenaan Onderaan