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Thread ID: 82697 2007-09-05 02:21:00 Stuttering in Gaming and Modeling! AlexeyT (12780) Press F1
Post ID Timestamp Content User
588067 2007-09-07 02:14:00 LOL, format the drive due to a graphical hitch...ROFL....

This has been covered before, and is NOT a technician's solution period, unless of course this is a standard build on standard hardware in a corporate environment to save time an allow the tech to continue browsing the web...LOL

I'd love to be a fly on the wall at an IT interview with the interviewee giving that as an answer.....ROFL
SolMiester (139)
588068 2007-09-07 03:43:00 So your system is an HP model? Would have been useful if you mentioned this in the first place. :mad: Whats the particular model? Pete O'Neil (6584)
588069 2007-09-07 04:32:00 m7480n AlexeyT (12780)
588070 2007-09-07 07:07:00 I have discovered that this problem is widespread. I tried a flash game. Same problem. Typing. SAME PROBLEM. Probably other things as well. Every 6.2 seconds to be precise. But it only stutters if a have a key pressed exactly at 6.2 seconds. Hence the typing. Mouse is fine. Both are connected wireless, however i doubt a keyboard could be causing actual frame stutters in games. Looking at cpu usage history in task manager as I'm typing, it looks like a freaking heart monitor

What keyboard/mouse connections do you have?, are you using the same USB tower connections, what happens if you change/separate the USB device thru the different USB ports?
SolMiester (139)
588071 2007-09-07 19:56:00 Hurrah! I think i found the culprit!!! I checked out Task Manager again, and instead of looking at mem usage tab during spikes i looked under cpu tab and found the process "rundl32.exe" taking up 50% during the spikes! Note the name of the task IS "rundl32.exe" and not "rundll32.exe" which is required system process. Looking in google i found out that this is indeed a worm! As soon as i ended this process, my stuttering dissapeared. How can i permanently remove this, though? ZoneAlarm, SpyBot and Online scans didn't pick this up! but good old google pulled through in the end. AlexeyT (12780)
588072 2007-09-07 20:29:00 Do a scan with AVG or Avast or get trojan remover in my sig update it then scan.

And then open my computer right mouse on c and select scan with TR.

To see if TR DOES pick it up, reboot and leave the rundl file running get off the net, then scan with trojan remover.

Then UPDATE windows.
Speedy Gonzales (78)
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