I don't know if you've had this experience using Windows XP, clicking the right mouse button on the selected file suddenly slows the system down.
It was not long before someone raised such a question and turned on the resource monitor and found it, and the CPU occupancy rate reached 100% when the right mouse button was clicked.
Is this a bug in XP? Microsoft has finally quietly published a report that confirms this: In Windows XP Explorer, selecting a File right button will take up a lot of memory!
Microsoft said in the article, when you are in Windows XP Explorer, select the file right-click, the Display pop-up menu when the CPU occupancy rate is 100%.
This means that any file copy operation "may stop responding" (described in the article). And the speed of network connection will also decrease significantly. At this point, any stream operation, such as listening to music, may be interrupted!
But to solve this problem is also very easy, you can turn off the menu bar and toolbar in the "Conversion effect (transition effects)" option, or the right to click before the left button.
This shortcoming exists in all versions of Windows XP, including the SP1 for fixing bugs, and the SP1a version.
Interested friends can click on the following page screenshot to enter the original text: