I have been the technical support coordinator for a big ten university for the last several years (at home on a back injury at the moment) and have been doing computer support as a profession for 12 years. I will share a little of what I have learned with you.
A firewall is extremely helpful to have on your computer. If you are running Windows XP then make sure it is updated to service pack 2 and that you have your firewall enabled. Also, it is very good to shut off the system restore feature on your machine because viruses can copy themselves to this folder and your virus software is unable to scan or clean malicious items in this folder. SpyBot, Ad-aware and hijackthis are very useful tools in keeping your computer clean of bots and spyware. The Google toolbar is very helpful in keeping those pesky pop-ups from popping up all of the time. You can download this from the main Google page and clicking on (more). These all are free that I have mentioned so far. You can also check your run folder for items that are automatically starting up every time you turn on your computer - click on your start button and then click on run, type in msconfig and press the enter button - a box will come up - click on the STARTUP tab, here is where you will find most things that are starting up every time you start the PC. The first column will show you the name of program that is starting up, you can do a search on Google for what each item means and determine if it's something that you need to start up or not. You will most likely be able to turn everything in there off and your PC will still run just fine but make note that some things in there will run your printer, or your digital camera and things like that - so you will have to play around and finds what works for you. The speed your computer runs at is pretty much determined by many different things such as hardware and software, the most important thing is to make sure your system is running at it's full resources and you do this by making sure that the computer is using the least amount of resources. This is achieved by making sure that you are only running programs that are required or by a few programs that are needed for your printers, cameras and things of that nature. In other words, don't run your little weather bug icon on the corner of your monitor because all this is doing is slowing down your computer and stealing the resources away from what you really need them doing. Also, make sure you keep your hard drive defragmented as this will keep your computer running at it's best. RAM is always very important and will gain you speed more than anything else (next to a faster processor) - if you are running windows XP then you should be running at the very least 256MB of RAM but I highly recommend running 512MB as this is where Windows XP really smoothes out. There are several different tweaks a person can do to their machine to obtain maximum performance and you can find alot by going to your favorite search engine and typing in your operating system and the keyword - tweaks. I hope this helps you all. Please fell free to ask any specific questions as I am always happy to help.
:toast:
BD