Office 2007 exceedingly slow on Vista 64, help!

E

emorphien

I have problems with Powerpoint 2007 on XP on a decently quick laptop. Is
this software so poorly optimized that using the newer presentation features
means slow response and a hanging PowerPoint from time to time on a 2Ghz
Pentium M with 2GB RAM?

Worse though is my Excel 2007 issue and this is one I really need help with.
On Vista 64 Ultimate, I have Excel 2007 running and it is exceptionally
slow, even with moderate amounts of data. The computer is an Intel Core 2
Duo running at 3Ghz with 4GB RAM.

I'll use my current example: I have relatively small data set of 11 columns
of 1200 data points each. I'm attempting to make a series of plots of this
data however just clicking on a data series to disable the markers (even
though I select scatter plot with only lines and no data point markers) takes
30 seconds to bring up the options to do so.

I also wanted to plot one of the data series' on another vertical axis for
two different plots. Each one took about 3 minutes to complete as I waited
for Excel to get its act together. CPU and RAM are not maxing out, far from
it, but Excel can't keep this coordinated at all while consuming over a
quarter gig of RAM.

Is there some fix, or optimization to make Excel tolerable on Vista 64?
 
E

Echo S

I don't know about Excel, but with PPT, we don't see too many reports of
excessive slowness.

I would recommend changing hardware acceleration
http://www.pptfaq.com/FAQ00129.htm, updating video drivers, and making sure
you have a local printer driver installed and set as the default printer
http://www.pptfaq.com/FAQ00605.htm

Also make sure you don't have any Office plug-ins enabled on your antivirus
program. See, for example, http://www.pptfaq.com/FAQ00387.htm

Also disable any add-ins you may have installed. (Office Button | PPT
Options | Add-ins) Some actually come installed as part of PPT -- they'll
show with "Document Inspector" listed in the "Type" column and will probably
be listed as "Inactive Application Add-ins. You can ignore those, they're
not a problem. But if you have others, try disabling them.

If those don't work, then I suggest you post to the PowerPoint group and
mention the things you've tried to correct the problem as well as specifics
regarding what "using the newer presentation features" means.
 

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments. After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.

Ask a Question

Top