@qasdfdsaq because they can have the largest base of people who can answer, arrive there, and just upvote what was already answered , and properly too.
There are many ways to look at the process IDs in Windows, in PowerShell:
ps | select Id, ProcessName | Sort Id | ft -AutoSize
gives me:
Id ProcessName
-- -----------
0 Idle
4 System
264 svchost
388 smss ...
lol, i noticed that it seemed that it is just a new number :-) and not a lot of vast changes, the same basic "chip" items, loads of latency to have them work in whatever the new method is.
I got a bounty that i could toss on either one, if someone would FINISH it :-) i mean you ask for the data they provide it, and it obviously has other people seeing the same thing.
Me thinks there is either an update (where MS does the compressed ram thing) or a logical reason why this is occuring, that Can be explained fully, therefore a bounty.
the web shows 4 possible (LOL) solutions (ok workarounds) for the problem which IS a problem when it is failing , not just the usual using all the memory.
One of those things that solves for some, but not for others, or solves it for a while 1) shut off stupidFetch 2) the paging size was set wrongly , causing the fail, not the abuse 3) Bad programs leaking like seives
4) something going wrong with ReadyBoost, which could be something to do with bad attempts at turning it off, because it is not so easy to just stop.
So would my bounty go to waste with stock answers and lame repetitions, if these low rep fly by night users do not come back to finish it. The point would be to completly discover the actual cause.
there are 2 others that are stock win10 uses too much ram. it is interesting on the subject of the ram compression http://superuser.com/questions/950120/windows-10-high-memory-usage-when-screen-is-off "This means that when Memory Manager feels memory pressure, it will compress unused pages instead of writing them to disk. "
far to often people say "windows is using to much memory!" and my response is "why do you think that" I don't blame people of course because this used to be a problem and by "used to be a problem" i mean before Windows XP :$
This suggests that the MS method IS to compress the 00 out block sets (unused), not to do hard work compressing memory. But at any rate a technique of this style can Hide a problem that it actually has.
@Ramhound right i would filter a Whiney "why is it using so much memory" out over the Duude it is fully tossing a out of memory error, and programs are failing. this "proc" thing as discussed on MSanswers seems to be the latter, causing complete fails.
Stupidly i dont even know what this process is, not having yet touched win10. seems to have things combined under it much like those other group it services things (which i hate).
I would also still like to know about any of the things that are Excessivly paging, or require this ram compresssion to :-PPPPht fix them.
Upgrading (instead of clean install) and all that stuff people have , some of which may not be compatable with win10. problem is they just dont Know then. If they had to one-by-one install that stuff, they might know when they install something everything started going badly. one program a day that is all we ask :-)
@JourneymanGeek What's not so unusual is that the second answer appears to show a permanent fix, while the accepted highly upvoted answer provides only a temporary fix ...
The general idea was that a bounty's purpose was to reward a good answer not transfer reputation between users. So if the "user" is trying to transfer reputation between usernames that is :$
I have to restart my intellij every like 20 minutes whenever I hit multiple times ctrl+tab. It looks like clicking this multiple time on my ubuntu 13.10 + intellij 13.01 makes my intellij stuck. on intellij 12 same OS everything is just fine.
anyway to work around this?
Is it possible to view a movie at the same time using my phone, while it's playing on my laptop? If possible, vlc would be my first choice, but I could use other players as well.
@Mokubai It does look suspicious. The OP Jas self answered and deleted his answer. then another user Tomer Ben David posted an identical (to the deleted) answer 1 minute later and it was accepted and later got a bounty.
I accidentally entered this command in a big working directory and got this result:
d:\prog>move ^<
10 file(s) moved.
Can someone explain what have I just done? I have no idea :/
Note:
This only seems to happen if there are files in the directory with just an extension (and no name), ...
Normally < is the redirect command for stdin. ^ is the escape character so ^< means a literal < character. So move ^< should mean move a file called < to the current directory. However < is not a valid filename ...
@Psycogeek It looks like a strange bug in cmd.exe with the processing of command line arguments. If so that is good to know. And it's not stupid to do something accidentally ;)
Backups are a marginal benefit for me, if I care about my data then it is copied somewhere. I suppose app data that is hard to get to could be neat to back up
None of my devices run that hot for long periods for me to worry about clock speed. Though I thought the principle of "race to idle" should mean that at a higher clock it can cycle down sooner... Is the default scheduler that crap that it holds it at the higher clock?
@Mokubai It kinda depends on the workload, but capping CPU clocks does extend battery life if you don't mind the slowdown.
CyanogenMod for Nexus 9 ships with the TouchDemand governor by default; I have not changed it.
The fact of the matter is that power consumption increases quadratically with clock speed.
This is why Apple processor designs are low-clocked but very wide (Cyclone is 6-wide)
The NVIDIA Denver core used in the 64-bit Tegra K1 on the Nexus 9 is 7-wide with VLIW design motifs from Transmeta (code morphing, dynamic code optimization). That's why they can get away with two cores rather than four, but it also tends to run hot, especially at 2.3 GHz.
The single-thread performance on the Nexus 9 is outstanding for many workloads, but once again, it runs very hot.
Project Denver is the codename of a microarchitecture designed by Nvidia that implements the ARMv8-A 64/32-bit instruction sets using a combination of simple hardware decoder and software-based binary translation (dynamic recompilation) where "Denver's binary translation layer runs in software, at a lower level than the operating system, and stores commonly accessed, already optimized code sequences in a 128MB cache stored in main memory". Denver is a very wide in-order superscalar pipeline. Its design makes it suitable for integration with other SIPs cores (e.g. GPU, display controller, DSP, image...
A bit of an oddball CPU, but it delivers the performance it's supposed to in most workloads.
@RACING121 via had a licence till last year. Then there's this company that does 386 derivatives. Then there's a half dozen arm licences, mips, IBM with POWER....
@bwDraco Should be noted that Qualcomm and Nvidia are the only ones that really do custom high-powered cores. At least in the typical phone/tablet market.
HOLD EVERYTHING ! Science may provide us with an answer, and might compel one to propose an hypothesis of the nature of MATR and it'boolean RAM cryptology, so much so in fact, that presentation of some lofty idealogically BIAS based 3RD tier PRIZM system fault, anS ANAL power SOURCE may t.iv OUT...
Ah I see I get a better idea now, it was not pointless. People obviously know what they can do with a phone but it's definitely not as obvious as what you can do with a rooted phone.
@Noob17 Basically, think about what you want to do. Then, if it's technically possible but the phone OS doesn't allow you to do so, that is where root helps.
One of the bigger uses is probably "debloating", removing apps that are (permanently) installed by the manufacturer or carrier.
@JourneymanGeek The Atom lineup is just the most confused mix of tech :S
@qasdfdsaq I'm not saying necessarily real-world devices meet spec. I'm saying that even if they met spec a Core M chip simply cannot sustain burst speeds.