This exact one : Rosewill RD500-2-SB 500-Watt Stallion Series Power Supply: Electronics
I have a Rosewill RD500-2DB 500w stallion series psu as far as I'm aware anyway), no idea if that'll help or has anything to do with this These both occurred right after each other at 7:05, 7:09, 7:53, 7:56Įdit: I've just done "netsh interface ipv6 uninstall" because I'm not using ipv6 (uhh. It's in the log pretty often, always directly after "The Microsoft IPv6 Developer Edition driver was started." The HID Input Service service terminated with the following error: I have a Q8200 I could try, if that is compatible and the Pentium D isnt but I got the board+cpu as a combo =/Īnd I'm kind of paranoid about removing/applying thermal pasteĪlso maybe this is related to my problems? In Event Viewer I'm seeing a red X with "The HID Input Service service terminated with Event ID: 7023 I don't think its the wrong type, can the wrong type fit in my board? I've ordered new ram for this but it isn't here yet. I have a Pentium D950 3.4 GHz, in a Gigabyte GA-G31M-ES2LĪnd I think I meant DDR2 and mistyped, I'm using Corsair DDR2 PC2-6400 800 MHz ram that was previously in a Zotac G31 mobo, it passes hours of Memtest with flying colours so I used it in this machine. Here is what it looks like when I move the mouse, stop for a bit, then move it again: And I can make my CPU usage go insane by moving my mouse. Or like my graphics card is barely working, but I'm able to use its resolutions and run games that require it etc. It's like there's a speed setting for my entire computer and someone turned it down a little bit. Video and games are both sluggish though. I tried my preferred USB mouse again (Logitech MX518, avoided installing setpoint and special drivers this time) because the problem was so slight, and it stayed the same, I can play games and watch video with minimal slowdown. Do you want to restart your computer now?" I have no idea what it was. You must restart your computer before the new settings will take effect. The software that supports your device requires that you restart your computer. Something popped up saying "Windows has finished installing new devices. In Task Manager I can still see CPU usage going to 30-40% when I move the mouse around, I don't know if that's normal or not. Restarted, Windows detected the ps/2 ball mouse I was using, problem was still there but very slight. I uninstalled all mice in Device Manager, I even used the "SET DEVMGR_SHOW_NONPRESENT_DEVICES=1" command and "show hidden" so I could get everything, nothing was hidden though. I don't see how infection could even be a problem at this pointĪnyone recognise this problem or have any ideas? :frown: New build, no viruses, scanned for good measure with Avast (then uninstalled Avast to see if it helped), Malwarebytes, Spybot, Microsoft Security etc. In task manager performance tab, cpu goes to 100% usage when the cursor is moved around. Mouse is a wired Logitech MX518, uses Setpoint softwareĪll the specs I can think of, let me know if you think any other info would help mouse drivers, video card drivers, network adapter drivers (thought the problem was related to network activity because of startup/safe mode behaviour being normal), catalyst control centre, etc.ģ.25 GB ram (2x2 GB ddr3 tested with Memtest) Things I've tried: uninstalling / reinstalling / repairing / etc. Pc issue - fine unless cursor moves? - YouTube I can watch video and listen to music perfectly, until I move the cursor. until you move the cursor.Ĭursor is choppy and affects sounds. I can only guess that it is either because I installed the logitech mouse drivers previously (setpoint) and they automatically set the correct PS/2 rate when the mouse is connected.Cursor is smooth and fast at startup (and in safe mode), sound works fine (startup noise) but when everything loads and Windows is actually usable, it's like the PC works great. I really don't know why its running as fast as USB sampling rate would. Now I didnt go into PS/2 properties and tweak the settings, so I didnt actually manually increase the sampling rate. To alleviate this problem, I decided to download a PS/2 rate checker, and was surprised that it picked up the mx1000 as 125hz under USB AND picked it up as 125hz under PS/2. So it technically makes the whole point of having a high DPI mouse useless, because windows wont even pick up the difference.
I did that and it works fine now with no jerkiness, but then I started reading up on why USB is better than PS/2 for optical mice.īasically USB supports a 125hz sampling rate, while PS/2 only does about 80hz on 2000/XP. A simple fix I heard is that you should connect it to your PS/2 port instead of your USB port. I recently bought a MX1000, and like many others, it is one of those made that have a jerkiness problem.