Quote:
Originally Posted by John Rogers
I read through your posts again and did not see you mention the brand of computer nor did I see a post listing the "users" logged into your computer nor "system", "network" or other system level users that start processes and many times there will be 3 copies of the same thing running, one for you, one for system and maybe one for network?
Do you have to log into the network to do whatever it is you do? You didn't mention what your job is and how it connects to everything else? If it is a HP, those folks load several background processes that want to connect to HP everyday for updates and if they cannot get through, everything slows down and stops. Similar to processes having to go into a network server to get data or updates or ????? and if all 3000 users are banging away sharing porn or whatever then your PC will be at the end of the line. It will take a bit of effort but look to see those running processes and services are connecting to and are they doing anything requiring network access?
I agree with killing services and processes until CPU usage drops to < 5% or so or the PC is killed. Please let us know what is happening.
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Dell, engineering application. Always connected to the mothership. I should have mentioned that...a lot of things are outside my control. Including virus scans at odd times of the day.