I have a Acer Aspire lap top that i upgraded to N360 Premier on. It Has a P6200 dual core that has been maxed out since the install and erase and reinstall of this upgrade from N360.The lap top was working well at about 25% speed most of the time till new program install.How do i lower the use rate on prossesor?It is slowing my other progams down!
Hi goldsmith1958,
Did you have another AntiVirus program installed prior to installing N 360 P? If so it needs to be uninstalled via ControlPanel, reboot the system and then run the removal tool for that product - folowed by a reboot - prior to installing N 360 P. If you have not removed the previous AV, let us know which it is and we'll assist you with the removal tool.
Also do you have any other security programs installed which run in real time, such as MBAM Pro, SAS Pro, Spybopr S & D with Tea-timer enabled? If so these can also cause conflict with N 360 P and slow your system. If you have any of these - the real-time functions need to be disabled and then see what happens.
Please keep us posted.
The only anti viris i had was N360,and what ever comes as OEM with windows 7. I ran a Rn R program and then did a complete uninstall,erase and reinstall of N360 P. Was just following on screen prompt's to fix install problems. I have dumped my start up programs down to 85 and still my Cpu maxes after reboot.Not sure what to reset to free up CPU but will keep looking.
Startup programs = 85?? Mine =10 - unless you are talking about someplce other than msconfig/startup.
Which AV was OEM on your system and how was it removed prior to installing N 360?
Ok,I have a Acer Aspire 7739Z comes with intel HD graphics and a P6200 dual core cpu.In my task manager i have 76 prosseses now running and getting smaller.Under mscofig start up i have 16 start up programs.My windows search index prosses was running my cpu at full speed. I ended it and my cpu is running at what i would call normal speed now.Not sure how it got turned on during install of new N 360 P but am glad it is woking like it was.