Susan said to click on either one and review the log files. You will see blue dots -- which she calls "happy dots" -- along with yellow warning dots, and angry red dots. Concentrate on the red dots, scrolling up and down to look for them.
If you see several of the same error messages over and over again, this is an excellent indication that your system is trying to tell you something. Click on that message and open it up to read the information inside.
"Up near the top, there's a code," Susan explained. "It's called an event identification error code. That's a special number you will need to find out what's sick with your system. Copy that code number. Next, launch Internet Explorer and go to a Web site called EventID.Net. This is a Web site operated by a Canadian consulting firm that has accumulated from newsgroups and other sources all the fixes, resolutions, and everything that you will need to fix that issue or at least head you in the right direction. It costs $15 a year to subscribe and it's worth many times that if you work with multiple computers."
You can also, for free, do a Google Groups search for information about the error. To do this, go to the Google home page and click on the Groups tab above the search box.
"Now put in your exact error message and many times you will find that a fellow computer user not only had the same issue you did but got a resolution for it," Susan told me.
"I next try using the Google search engine to search the Microsoft Web site. Go to the Google home page and click on Advanced Search [to the right of the search box]. In the box marked 'Only return results from domain,' put in Microsoft.com and again, your exact error message. I find this method more effective than using Microsoft TechNet or other resources."
"Lastly, you need to do a bit of research in your own memory," Susan said. "Ask yourself, when was the last time this system worked properly? (No, the answer we are looking for is not 'never'.) Remind yourself of what you loaded in between [when it worked and when it stopped working] and first begin by uninstalling that software.
"Keep in mind that there have been instances where updated virus definition files can also be the culprit in bogging down your system, so you may not think that you've installed anything at all when, in fact, your system has been updated with new files."
Susan said the best way to track this sort of issue is to get more "connected" with a computer user group or community that uses the same sort of software that you do. The Microsoft Technical Communities Web site is the launching place for finding groups of computer users who primarily use Microsoft products. Susan said she has found that the community that she is involved with spots issues better than anyone else because they see the "patterns of errors" emerging.
"A certain political wife, now a US senator, got lambasted for saying, 'It takes a village to raise a child.' But, David, I can honestly say it takes a community to keep a computer running. And that's how this computer user would have approached your computer problem."
I appreciate the sentiment Susan expressed here, and have in the past spent many evenings singing "Kumbaya" with others while solving computer problems -- I have some friends I call to help me out all the time. But Susan's email points out, perhaps even better than my original column, that Microsoft still has a long way to go before its software can really become our friend.







Talkback
Great tips but scary stuff re Norton. Norton are a big software supplier and Norton utilities has got me out of many a hole. We have their AV software protecting our 25 user SBS network. Their AV software was best in recent PCPro tests. Are we safe/sensible or not. What do Norton say to this sort of comment ??
I have been completely unaware of any problems with Blaster, soBig etc.
The secret: I use a firewalled Linux system with every unnecessary service and port shut down.
I also need to spend no time or money on anti virus software.