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I'm sorry I don't understand 'Indexing' or what a 'Desktop search program' is...
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If you open your search box under Start, depending on the view you have, you should see Indexing Service status. If enabled, it means XP goes through the hard drive and "indexes" keywords so next time you search for something, it can find it faster. There are several 3rd party indexers that do similar things, Google Desktop being one.
This service does speed up searches, but it can affect system performance too. I don't search my hard drive often enough to worry about a search taking an extra 10 - 20 seconds, so mine is disabled.
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I downloaded IE7 a couple of days ago but I don't understand BHOs or add-ons...
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A couple days ago? Recent changes like that are good to know from the start. Did you have the problem before installing IE7?
I use XPPro SP3 with IE7 and though different than IE6, is much better than IE6 and does not take long to get used to. To see what BHOs are enabled in IE7, look under Tools > Manage Add-ons > Enable or Disable Add-ons and wait for the screen to fill. Let us know if any seem out of place, or better yet, "Reset" Internet Explorer. Click on Tools > Internet Properties > Advanced. See an explanation of what Reset does, then proceed if you want to take that route. You will lose the Google Toolbar, but IMO that is good - don't worry, it's the one I use too.
Then download the latest version and install it again, only this time, make sure you install using the "Custom" install if offered. Do not install any extra stuff they try to slough off on you - opt out of all but the bare necessities.
Yes, Everest does produce a lot to digest. Perhaps checking out
CPUz to learn the terminology. It does not provide graphics information so
GPU-Z is in the same light for GPUs.
Using graphics card instead of on-board graphics is good as on-boards have their own RAM to use. However, XP does much better in 1 Gb than it does in 512Mb, so that should get into the budget for the next upgrade - upgrading from 512Mb to 1Gb is normally the best bang for the money anyone can do to improve across the board performance.
The only way to determine the "rated" specifications of a power supply is to read the label. You can see the actual voltages in the BIOS Setup Menu and with monitoring programs, but you cannot see current used, so therefore you cannot see how much "power" in watts the PSU is capable of, or delivering.
So you need to look inside for label on power supply. If they played nice, it is mounted so you can read it without removing the supply. When open, I would look at the RAM slots to see how many you have occupied and available, for future reference.