"RnR" <> wrote in message
news:...
> On Tue, 29 Jan 2008 10:17:22 -0500, "Christopher Muto"
> <> wrote:
>
>>"S.Lewis" <> wrote in message
>>news:y2Fnj.53257$ t...
>>>
>>> "Tom Scales" <> wrote in message
>>> news:6B8FA6C7217C467EB6287322335E2DA6@M2010...
>>>> How much memory?
>>>>
>>>> Anyway, this is actually normal. It is done to preserve battery life.
>>>> Turn off Speedstep in the BIOS and adjust your power settings to Full,
>>>> or something like it, when on battery and the problem will go away.
>>>>
>>>> And you'll get about 1/2 the battery life.
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> This question is eerily similar to the poster below who had added a 2gb
>>> SODIMM to a V1000 (when specs only allow for 1gb/2gb max capacity).
>>>
>>> It just appears the poster has had a name change.
>>
>>right. and he/she dismissed my previous suggestion. but let him/her waste
>>time with all the other suggestions. speedstep or any other power saving
>>measure should not result in a delay of a typed letter from appearing on
>>the
>>screen. the cause of this behavior is because of what i previously
>>mentioned.
>>
>
>
> What makes you so sure that other suggestions are wasteful and yours
> is the only one right?
>
> I'm not so sure your suggestion is correct but I don't like Nortons
> either due to its quirks so I can't say you're wrong either. I still
> favor the lack of ram or checking processes first.
>
> The OP should weed thru each suggestion and hopefully one of them will
> work or solve the problem.
nobody knows for sure, but when someone asks a question and is given only
one solution that actually is know (albeit not well know) to be the culprit
to produce the exact symptom they describe and they ignore it then it seems
pretty clear that the problem goes beyond the computer itself. none of the
suggestions other than using more ram than the system is specified as to
work with (presumably that windows is capable of working with as dell does
not sell this machine with any other os - so using unix is no test as to how
windows will behave), or my suggestion has a shot at solving this. the op
dismissed both. other suggestions such as speedstep are logical, but even a
pentium ii laptop running xp with just 256mb ram does not have the symptom
of a delay in characters appearing after being typed. you know windows, you
can waste the rest of your life trying 'things' and get nowhere, so if
someone actually wants to solve a problem the thing to do is start with the
obvious... such as not installing more memory than it is know to work with
and look into restricted zones list, each of which are pretty simple things
to check, and the zones list as being a known (albeit not well know) source
of the precise things to try before grasping at straws for an fixes. but
what do i care if this person wants to waste their time and yours... if they
want to be illogical then nobody can help them and they can't help
themselves. let them call dell and have dell them to reload their operating
system, perhaps that will help