Go to step 6. If no service causes this problem, go to step 4. Click the Startup tab, and then click to select half of the check boxes in the Startup Item list. If the problem still occurs, repeat step 1 and step 4. In step 4, click to clear half of the check boxes that you originally selected in the Startup Item list. If the problem does not occur, repeat step 1 and step 4. In step 4, select only half of the remaining check boxes that are cleared in the Startup Item list. If only one startup item is selected in the Startup Item list, and you still experience the problem, the startup item that is selected in the list is the service that is causing the problem.
If no startup item causes this problem, a Microsoft service most likely causes the problem. To determine which Microsoft service may be causing the problem, repeat step 1 and step 2 without selecting the Hide all Microsoft services check box in either step. After you determine the startup item or the service that causes the problem, contact the program manufacturer to determine whether the problem can be resolved. Or, run the System Configuration Utility, and then click to clear the check box for the problem item.
After you have finished troubleshooting, follow these steps to reset the computer to start as usual:. Please let us know if you require further help. Regards Rehman - Microsoft Support. Was this reply helpful? Yes No. Sorry this didn't help. Thanks for your feedback. I've been having trouble for a few months with windows explorer Vista. It started after an automatic update made by my computer.
Every time I try to click on something on my windows bar across the bottom it freezes and gives me the error message "Windows Explorer Not Responding. PC specs 2. Sunday, October 28, PM. Hi acehardy, Based on your post, it looks as if the issue you faced is: There is a Vista Home Premium machine which IE crashes frequently. As a result, please reset the IE settings to disable add-ons: 1. Monday, October 29, AM. Monday, October 29, PM.
Hi acehardy, As this thread has been quiet for a while, we assume that the issue has been resolved. Friday, November 2, AM. Hi, I have the same problem with Vista home premium and IE7, the info you gave above did not work. Tuesday, December 4, PM. Sorry for the delay. I tried what you stated it didn't help the issue.
I halso have a brand new cor 2 duo machine and of course everything is vista certified. All my vista scale for proccessor ram, etc is 5. I can just be searching a random site and it just locks up haviung me to press the x button and says close or wait wait never works. It is just a pain as the xp explorer wasn't this much of a pain. Monday, December 10, PM. I don't have a Canon printer. Tuesday, December 11, PM.
If not, please perform the following steps to troubleshoot the issue: 1. Wednesday, December 12, AM. Thanks for all the help. I check the other suggestion and don't have omni page as for your last suggestion I check internet explorer and says IE no add-ons running. I will try and capture a screen of the issue but it mostly just says IE stopped working and thats all.
Wednesday, January 2, PM. Your solution worked great thanks a lot. Saturday, April 12, PM. Tuesday, September 23, AM. I haven't found an answer either and as a game revieer use the internet alot. My solution when it freezes I use firefox 3. I know that isn't a real answer but I can't waste my time trying to find a solution when no person seems to have any real answers.
I deleted all add ons and tried all the advice give over serveral boards to no help. Tuesday, September 23, PM. Saturday, November 22, PM. Wednesday, November 26, PM. I don't have any add ons and my ie7 freezes continually. I cured the problem by using Firefox as all the efforts I made with Microsoft were to no avail. Maybe Microsoft might think of writing better software. Tuesday, January 13, PM. Same problem on both of my notebooks with IE freezing up constantly Sunday, February 22, PM.
Same problem on both of my desktops with IE freezing up constantly Proposed as answer by bigbilly62 Friday, March 13, PM. Friday, March 13, PM. I agree with the folks that state this doesn't work turning off the add-ons. I did that 2 weeks back, and by IE still randomly goes into "not responding" mode.
That's a royal pain if you've gone to 6 or 7 sites, and are investigating things. I'm running Vista Home premium, 64 bit, on a pretty big, pretty 'virgin' system. It's a HP 17" laptop, 4G memory, all the bells and whistles. This doesn't happen at the start, but after about hours, eventually I'll open a window usually happens if I right-click, and select "open in new window". Anyhow, I guess I'm going to have to use firefox also, except there are a fair amount of sites that don't work with it either.
Monday, March 23, PM. In the past 2 weeks my computer has constanlty stopped working.. I was on the phone with Dell 2 days ago, as its still under warranty, and it seemed fixed. I had a tech guy I was going to pay that was on the way and after dell did some check on the hard drive and memory it worked fine.
He is coming tomorrow to do some cleanup.. Dell had me download malwarebytes from download. I had to run it again as it froze during removal.
The computer guy comes, I tell the story and he sits and checks out the computer.. All is great. Computer guy leaves.. What is the problem? If you see a window that says "Windows is attempting to fix this problem" pop up, click Cancel. Method 2. Open Internet Explorer. Removing third-party toolbars from your browser can prevent crashes due to running too many programs at once.
If Internet Explorer won't even run without crashing constantly, skip this method and reset Internet Explorer. Click Manage add-ons. It's near the middle of the drop-down menu. Click the Toolbars and Extensions tab. This is on the left side of the window. Click Disable. It's in the bottom-right corner of the window. Clicking this will disable the selected toolbar. You can repeat this process for each toolbar you want to remove.
Method 3. Type internet options into Start. This will search your computer for the Internet Options panel, which controls your settings for Internet Explorer. Click Internet Options. Doing so opens the Internet Options program. Click the Advanced tab. It's in the top-right side of the Internet Options window. Click Reset.
You'll find this button near the bottom-right side of the window. Check the "Delete personal settings" box. This box is near the middle of the page. Checking it ensures that any corrupt temporary files or history will be deleted as well. Click Close when prompted. Your Internet Explorer browser has successfully been reset. Method 4. Go to the Internet Explorer download page. Internet Explorer 11 is the last supported version of Internet Explorer.
If you aren't using it, updating may fix Internet Explorer crashing issues. Use Microsoft Edge or a third-party browser e. Scroll down to your preferred language.
Make sure you find the download in your preferred language, which you'll find on the left side of the page. Click the link for your operating system. Doing so will download the setup file onto your computer.
You'll see three links next to your preferred language: Windows 7 SP1 Bit - For a bit computer with Windows 7, 8, or 10 on it. If you don't know whether your computer is bit or bit, check your computer's bit number first. Double-click the Internet Explorer setup icon. This is in your computer's download location e. Click Yes when prompted. This brings up the Internet Explorer 11 installation window. Follow the on-screen instructions. Agree to Microsoft's terms of use by clicking I agree , click Next , select an install location, and check or uncheck the "Desktop shortcut" option.
Click Finish.
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