It doesn't matter how many you have as long as you have enough RAM to support all of them.
Personally, I only have 30
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Oct 20th, 2006 12:57 AM #1
How many processes is too many?
Currently I have 62 processes running, including iTunes, Azureus, Firefox, Sony Ericsson PC Suite and Disc2Phone, so I'm running a fair number of memory intensive programs.
Anyways, on average I've got about 50-55 processes running. Is that too many? What's an optimal amount? How can I figure out what is useful and what isn't? Other than typing each process name into google?
Any help is greatly appreciated.
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Oct 20th, 2006 01:03 AM #2Deal Guru




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Oct 20th, 2006 01:12 AM #3
Lol, right now it says I have 28. I have winamp on, msn, 2 folders open, firewall........antivirus....lol
And it's been a really long time since I've cleaned up my PC....but it's still going strong as if it were new.
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Oct 20th, 2006 01:28 AM #4
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Oct 20th, 2006 01:34 AM #5
50 right now
firefox, itunes, msn, dc++, anti-virus to name a few.
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Oct 20th, 2006 01:53 AM #6
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Oct 20th, 2006 02:41 AM #7
It's not a matter of how many. It's a matter of how useful they are.
If you're not synching your phone, why are the phone apps running? Sure, it's convenient for lazy people to have all those agents running in the background, but they make your computer run like crap.
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Oct 20th, 2006 10:20 AM #8
I currently have in the background: ATITool, Crystal CPUID, Diskeeper, Firefly Remote, Firefox, Juice (podcatcher), Newsbin, NOD32, Speedfan, uTorrent. 37 processes using 690MB.
I need all of them and I have 2GB of RAM, so I'm not too concerned about the actual number of processes.
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Oct 20th, 2006 12:17 PM #9
I have ~50 on each of my work machines, and probably a lot more on my home machine.
What's an optimal amount?
The optimal amount is the amount that suits your needs.
How many processes is too many?
Too many is when you don't have enough resources to go around for each process. Most people here are referring to RAM, and that is the main thing you need when you have lots of processes running, but don't forget about CPU time and various (file, network, other devices, etc) I/O that they may need.
That was true many years ago or if you have an older PC, but these days people have multicore processors and GBs of RAM. If maximum efficiency is what you're after, then you may as well turn off the spooler service, since ur not printing, DHCP client since you only need to grab an address once, as well as a ton of other things that are usually running.If you're not synching your phone, why are the phone apps running? Sure, it's convenient for lazy people to have all those agents running in the background, but they make your computer run like crap.
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Oct 20th, 2006 12:41 PM #10
I had my home desktop down to 18 processes for WinXP for quite a while, including firewall and AV. It has crept up to 21 now. I generally check the task list once per day and shut down those "sticky" processes that I'm not going to be using until I next have a need for them, just to avoid needless clutter.
On the other hand my Dell laptop came with 65 processes running out of the box, and I've only stripped it down to about 32.
The ones that bug me are things like Acrord32, the sticky Adobe Acrobat process whose purpose is to monitor your mouse movement on the desktop so that whenever you hover over an Acrobat pdf file, it can start to pre-open it so that Acrobat reader doesn't seem so painfully slow when you actually double-click the file to open it. Not to mention a whole host of sticky processes multi-megabytes in size with the single function of checking a web url once per day to see if there's an update available for their associated application.
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Oct 20th, 2006 12:43 PM #11
im running 61 right now, all be it about 15 or 20 of them are toshiba laptop programs for keyboard shortcuts and things.
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Oct 20th, 2006 02:17 PM #12
40 right now on the desktop
firefox, foobar, rmclock, apc powerchute, skype, live messenger, logitech setpoint, rainlender, avg free, rainmeter, prodigy 7.1 control panel, some other hidden windows crap
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Oct 20th, 2006 04:15 PM #13
>> If you're not synching your phone, why are the phone apps running? Sure, it's convenient for lazy people to have all those agents running in the background, but they make your computer run like crap.
> That was true many years ago or if you have an older PC, but these days people have multicore processors and GBs of RAM.
Dude, what thread are you reading? If it wasn't a concern, the OP wouldn't be posting about it. Yeah, sure, disabling one app isn't a big deal, but the point I'm trying to make here is that you shouldn't have tons of useless crap running in the background.
Everyone has multicore processors and GBs of RAM because their old computer was running too much crap, so they've upgraded.
If maximum efficiency is what you're after, then you may as well turn off the spooler service, since ur not printing, DHCP client since you only need to grab an address once, as well as a ton of other things that are usually running.
I'm sure some people actually do that (although I'm not one of them
). But there's a difference between disabling Windows processes and third-party installed apps, don't you think?
Last edited by rabbit; Oct 20th, 2006 at 04:17 PM.
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Oct 20th, 2006 05:18 PM #14
No number is too many. I'm currently running 103 processes. As long as you have enough resources to support what you're doing without the system getting bogged down, why worry?
Having said that, disabling any unnecessary processes will free up memory and system resources and it can't hurt - just don't go crazy trying to free up every kB of memory that you can.
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Oct 20th, 2006 11:27 PM #15
The same thread YOU are reading. If you haven't noticed, the ideal number was up to whatever your system can support. By your previous post, you are automatically assuming that people who don't close these processes will have computers that "run like crap" and its because they are too "lazy" to turn them off. What Im saying is that this is true of older machine, but with modern machines, most of them can handle all of this stuff fine without any slowdown. Im running 78 processes right now because my computer can handle it, and they aren't running cuz Im too lazy to close them, there is no need to. If I see degraded performance, I will deal with it accordingly.
My point here is on the progress of computers. If you looked at Windows 95, 3.11, MSDOS, each version had more and more background processes, and thus more and more features, but at a cost of system resources. But after passing a certain point, it no longer matters. So if your computer can handle all of it, the performance gain you get from this is alike to turning off all your unused system services, less functionality/convience, and almost zero performance gain.
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