but 15 instances seems rather odd yes? 14 of them are using less than 1 mb and then I see one that is always running and is taking up 140 mb. I would like to eliminate this one. What do you think about doing that and why is it taking up so much memory?
No, 15 isn't that odd. 12 or more is the example given in the article you linked and it tells you in there how to reduce them. That said, the one that's taking up memory is probably the one governing things you're actually using. Ultimately, if you're having memory problems, a better solution would be to get more memory instead of trying to kill potentially system-critical processes.
15 is a pretty normal number if you want to reduce the amount of ones going and the memory they use you should run "services.msc" and stop the one that aren't useful.
svchost is just the host application for all your services to run in.
currently my comp has 12 svchost services running and 57 services and i run windows7 64bit you prolly have similar numbers.
if you go threw the list and there desperations you could prolly disable a lot of them with no bad effects depending on your computers setup but it wont likely give you any noticeable performance increase. and more than likley confuse the fuck out of you when you try to do something a week later that relies and something you fucked up.
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svchost is just the host application for all your services to run in.
currently my comp has 12 svchost services running and 57 services and i run windows7 64bit you prolly have similar numbers.
if you go threw the list and there desperations you could prolly disable a lot of them with no bad effects depending on your computers setup but it wont likely give you any noticeable performance increase. and more than likley confuse the fuck out of you when you try to do something a week later that relies and something you fucked up.
doing an RMA on 8 gigs of memory, hopefully that will help later
god
it's like we are in two different universes