


after a while it started animating the thermometer graphic and created a power profile called "cool down" which has CPU processor speed MAX set to 50% really what it should do is create a few new power profiles with each set to different CPU MIN and MAX values with the coolest settings down to 5% MIN and MAX and the hottest setting set to 5% MIN and 100% MAX and probably also include the other GPU and PCI Express power reduction settings to respectively. it spawns 21 instances YES 21 instances of cmd.exe messing around with POWERCFG.EXE to manipulate some power profiles from the command lines showing in task manager which persist even after the program is exited! suggesting it is not working correctly, it also popped up an alert box mentioning an I/O error 32. Installed and registered under 32bit Vista SP2+ says it is registered but START button does not animate or apparently cause anything to happen. The more you use it the more resources it eats and never gives back. I beleive what the developer is doing is what is called wholesale resource leaking. If we exit the program gracefully the CMD.EXE processes are orphanned and would have to be end tasked in task manger or logged out to get rid of them OR best way is to use task manager to "End Process Tree" to end the program manually and take all its zombie child processes with it. The more you use it the more resources it eats and never gives back.Įvery time we press the START/STOP button it starts two new cmd.exe child processes to swap power profiles and leaves them running but doing nothing but consuming time slices and system memory. and back to balanced when I STOP it.Įvery time we press the START/STOP button it starts two new cmd.exe child processes to swap power profiles and leaves them running but doing nothing but consuming time slices and system memory. mine was low power profile originally but this switched it to the hotter running balanced then to the crippling cool down profile when I START it. it switches between balanced power profile and cool down power profile regardless of what our starting profile was. technically that is what does the work of the program.


When we uninstall this and we probably will it leaves the "cool down" profile behind. So for me it certainly makes a noticeable difference after a couple of hours of observation. Someone mentioned SpeedFan, which I have always had installed and mostly off, because it makes no difference, at least to my machine.
7thshare card data recovery key windows 10#
My 6 year old Samsung Windows 10 Home AMD 8. I have turned the program a few times on & off and it shoots up to over 70° C with the mentioned tasks on and back down with it on.
7thshare card data recovery key update#
In the past, I have had the PC suddenly misbehaving for long periods and then stops and I suppose some form of update is behind.Īfter installing 7thShare CPU Cooling Master 1.1.8.8 this afternoon (local time), right now I have CNN USA running in Audials Internet TV | Player & Recorder, have multiple Firefox tabs loaded, Audials one on (passive), etc while doing some work, on average the CPU temperature has been definitely reduced by 10 - 14 ☌. It seems to contribute to this, but it's not always on.Īnyway, I have been planning to look at what was keeping the temperatures that high, also suspecting some Windows or other update. I need to say I recently in addition Audials Radio Tracker, Audials Internet TV | Player & Recorder which I mostly have on all the time in the background to mostly listen to some International TV. Of late, for some reason the CPU temperature which is normally mostly in the 50 -60s Celsius even with at least one streaming video running most of the time in Firefox + a couple of other tabs + Audials radio, the temperatures have been too often in the early 70s ☌. As a matter of fact, I was quite skeptical after reading most of the comments this morning.
