By Anne Torres

Computer freeze ups can be worse than being shunned by a lover. When your computer freezes and you can't get what you want, give your PC a little lovin' and watch your PC react to you again.

Computer freeze ups can cause more irritation than the face of negative response. Right when everything is going so easily - your favorite songs are streaming and your favorite video is playing, and all the while you're emailing your mother, instant messaging your friend, and working on your latest business proposal - your computer freezes up, your cursor doesn't move, your keys don't work, and you can't even make the task manager up with CTRL ALT DEL.

On top of everything else, you press the on/off button on your computer and it doesn't shut off. It is as froze as frozen as freezing can get. It's time to lag behind under the desk or behind the computer and dig through the twisted web of cords to find the one that can sever connections the power to your computer. And voila - problem resolved. Your computer is no longer frozen. It's off. But you are stranded from life, and no better off than being alone on a floating iceberg in the middle of the melting Arctic zone. Now is the best time to unfreeze the computer and make computer freezes a frozen blast in the past.

Every single hardware and piece of software you were using before your computer froze used your Windows registry. Your Windows registry controls your desktop, your speakers, your video and audio cards, your Internet connections, word processing programs, cursors and on/off buttons. If your PC has been your lifeline and you haven't paid attention to your Windows registry yet, your PC is going to give you the cold shoulder and freeze up.

If you don't yearn for your computer to freeze, you need to listen to your Windows registry and do away with what's not imperative. When too many unimportant files fill up the Windows registry, registry commands get sidetracked and start looking in the incorrect direction.

These unimportant files accumulate from simple Internet Explorer error messages, changes in user profiles or desktops, word processing changes in commands, shortcuts, and even icons. Installing and uninstalling programs can cause .exe errors, .dll errors and uninstaller errors. Cleaning out your registry of the unused and unimportant files can refresh your PC and Windows registry to focus on the meaningful commands, instead of creating an icy computer arctic freeze because things became too tiring and too confusing.

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