How to Fix Windows 8.1 Slow Performance and Boot Time

solve windows 8 8.1 boot issues

5 Comments

  1. Gregory Bratz says:

    I read your tutorial and other interesting this on this page because it interested me, but not cause my Computers are having them issues. But I enjoy,, listening, learning, and reading for broader knowledge of other issues that plague Computers. I enjoyed reading your Tutorial, and Thank You for sharing your IT experience..

  2. ichabod mudd says:

    run this, 2 times, and bingo all times are there, in seconds.

    effortless. and free, for 14 days.
    no, this is not spam, its just a retired person (mr. clean) for years. and years.
    try it. or post something that is easy to do, I did try, MS WPR, and is tedious at best.
    for sure geek only.

  3. Sometimes that problem is because the correct hard drive is not on #1 boot device on your BIOS
    Goto BIOS (F2 or delete)
    Look into Bios Priority
    If needed go to “Advanced Mode” – “Boot” – “Boot option Priorities”
    Check on “Boot Option #1” if the correct hard drive is set
    If your HD is not showing in “Boot Option #1” go to “Hard Drive BBS Priorities” and change the order
    Save and Enjoy 🙂

  4. Many times what actually makes Windows 8 and 8.1 slow isn’t what you think it is. More times than not Windows Update can silently fail and of course another problem is not necessarily having corrupt drivers or drivers not loading but the security descriptors are fudged or missing. What Microsoft will then do upon boot and shutdown or reboot is try to fix this issue on the fly (stupid, I know) and then if it can, it will load it’s own generic drivers that may not play to well with your system, hence a hang or a really slow operation.

    Sure, having problems with the common virus / trojans and other malware does happen often enough but with using a good security suite that is updated regularly (pulse updates enabled), this is less of an issue, assuming you do allow your system to be scanned and not just updated, that is.

    I advise against using “msconfig”, as Black Viper states, use “services.msc” instead, note, make sure you click on each service though, because it will tell you the what-ifs, not all configurations are exactly the same.

    The one thing that really slows down all Microsoft installations starting with Windows 2000 and up is the .NET mscorsvw series optimizing services. What it’s supposed to do is tweak and tune the Microsoft applications and sub-assemblies to make them faster and more memory efficient after doing a Windows Update. My own experiences with programming for Microsoft based machines and as a hardware engineer is that is completely bogus. There has never been a memory leak free Microsoft application or library, it doesn’t tweak those assemblies like they claim.

    I’ve actually shut down all those mscorsvw as a test to see if it would break my system, I never had trouble with it after I disabled it. It uses a lot of CPU processing power and it’s supposed to stop after it’s done in about half an hour but sometimes it gets “stuck” if there is an error in the sub-assembly that wasn’t detected before it started, it will continue indefinitely until you pull the plug or force a reboot. This can also affect you when trying to shuitdown as well.

    Now, as far as pagefile.sys is concerned, if you’re not a techhead like me and don’t know what you’re doing, don’t mess with it, please! The only time you turn that off is when you have more memory than you need in your computer and when you have a RAM based cache drive (non Microsoft type of course, either using it for a server or for gaming). Turning off the pagefile can be used for troubleshooting, too but that’s advanced stuff I won’t get into in this post.

    As far as “Windows Assessment and Deployment Kit“. (ADK) is concerned, only qualified technicians, engineers and power users should be using those tools, not noobs, that’s playing with fire if you do. ADK is designed to get customized disks ready for deployment on a mass scale, like in corporations with many desktop and server PCs with identical configurations in software and hardware.

    One sure fire way to speed up your computer is to login locally, making sure your computer boots in local mode instead of cloud mode, if there is a problem in the cloud or your Internet connection is gone goofy, this can slow your boot time to a crawl and same with trying to get out of the cloud to shutdown or reboot.

    I actually tell people to avoid Windows 8 and 8.1 because of the cloud problems, rather just use Windows 7 x64 Premium Home or Professional, Ultimate is too expensive and is a joke.

    There is another tool that is quite good for rooting out problems your anti-virus and anti-malware can’t get rid of, look up ADWCleaner, it’s from France.

    I should note that I don’t use Microsoft Windows at home, I prefer Xubuntu 14.04 (a branch / fork of Ubuntu 14.04 Linux), I use a i686 kernel, I can use 32-bit applications but still access up to 64 Gigabytes of RAM and not run in 64-bit compatibility mode to get a half-arse support for 32-bit applications.

    Granted, Linux is not Microsoft Windows but it’s nice not having to use all the extra applications on top of Linux vs. people in MS-Windows.

  5. First of all its good to go to control panel and install updates ( important updates) via win update. Secondly use programs such as CCleaner to clean useless files and registry.
    Now while updating to 8.1 from store try to let it complete without any interference or disturbance.
    After upate complete ur boot up may be slow, So for improvement follow the steps:

    1) Go to Control Panel and install updates ( important updates) via win update.
    2) Check if all the drivers are working properly. (reinstall if necessary), especially Display Drivers
    3) use programs such as CCleaner to clean useless files and registry.
    4) Go to disk cleanup and clean the disks.(also clean system files– select all boxes).
    5) Restart. (Repeat the processes at regular intervals)

    Got the same problems 4 times with upading win 8.1 as urs.
    Following the above steps improved my pc bootup even faster than win 8.

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