I have two computers using Microsoft Security Essentials. One is a power 8-core computer with a 15k RPM hard drive and it does not see slow downs, so this observation is purely based on how up-to-date your computer is and took me a few days to figure out what was happening.
So, if you have a slow computer that hasn't been updated in years, and you have Microsoft Security Essentials (and possibly other Real-Time Protection virus software) installed, this most likely applies to you.
With no exceptions added for UE, since UE saves unsaved documents (documents in edit mode) to your hard drive in a temp directory, which I believe is in the AppData folder (in Vista/7) or Application Settings folder on XP, everytime you update the file, add/remove a character, the active protection will engage and scan the file to make sure it's safe before it lets UE continue. So, as you can assume, if you are a fast typer, this will cause your productivity to greatly decrease.
I have tried this on a variety of size files, and it seems to only happen on large files with >1000 lines of decently large width text, but the slow down, I believe, is proportional with how many lines you have.
In order to remedy this problem, you have to add an Exception to your real-time protection program and tell it to exclude UE's temp folder directory, which is: (this is for an XP user) C:\Documents and Settings\[Your Name Here]\Application Data\IDMComp\UltraEdit
Hope this helps anyone else who is encountering this issue.
So, if you have a slow computer that hasn't been updated in years, and you have Microsoft Security Essentials (and possibly other Real-Time Protection virus software) installed, this most likely applies to you.
With no exceptions added for UE, since UE saves unsaved documents (documents in edit mode) to your hard drive in a temp directory, which I believe is in the AppData folder (in Vista/7) or Application Settings folder on XP, everytime you update the file, add/remove a character, the active protection will engage and scan the file to make sure it's safe before it lets UE continue. So, as you can assume, if you are a fast typer, this will cause your productivity to greatly decrease.
I have tried this on a variety of size files, and it seems to only happen on large files with >1000 lines of decently large width text, but the slow down, I believe, is proportional with how many lines you have.
In order to remedy this problem, you have to add an Exception to your real-time protection program and tell it to exclude UE's temp folder directory, which is: (this is for an XP user) C:\Documents and Settings\[Your Name Here]\Application Data\IDMComp\UltraEdit
Hope this helps anyone else who is encountering this issue.