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Where in my post was I inferring I had mistaken 100% disk usage for 100% CPU usage?
What did your file system watcher program reveal? I suspect it wouldn't have access to some system files that Resource Manager would.
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dandy72 wrote: Where in my post was I inferring I had mistaken 100% disk usage for 100% CPU usage?
I was just mentioning the other details.
dandy72 wrote: What did your file system watcher program reveal? I suspect it wouldn't have access to some system files that Resource Manager would.
It runs as Admin and has access to everything. I mean everything. Even files that I cannot actually edit however, again as I said once this problem occurs I cannot switch to any other program. Nothing.
It could be a graphics problem like the desktop just isn't redrawing so I can't tell if anything is happening. Had that problem way back on NT 4 years ago.
Thought the machine was locked but actually the graphics weren't being redrawn.
Also, I updated the original post with an edit and I found someone else mentioning the same problem with Chrome.
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raddevus wrote: found someone else mentioning the same problem with Chrome
For years I've avoided Chrome...I keep hearing stories of seemingly unrelated problems that simply shouldn't happen--nothing ever specific, just "weird coincidences", until Chrome is removed or reinstalled. I had to install it about a week ago on a machine I actually care about, and I still feel dirty.
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I may be a .NET developer but my next PC's going to be a Mac.
Slogans aren't solutions.
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It's getting better with .NET Core support and Rider by JetBrains.. I've been using it on Mac and Ubuntu without too many issues.
Won't be long until we're all programming .NET on whatever platform we want
Ah, I see you have the machine that goes ping. This is my favorite. You see we lease it back from the company we sold it to and that way it comes under the monthly current budget and not the capital account.
modified 31-Aug-21 21:01pm.
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Brent Jenkins wrote: Won't be long until we're all programming .NET on whatever platform we want
Yes, definitely, especially now SQLServer's available for LINUX.
Slogans aren't solutions.
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PeejayAdams wrote:
I may be a .NET developer but my next PC's going to be a Mac. |
And you'll still be able to dev .NET apps I guess since VStudio is going to be everywhere.
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JetBrains Rider already is!
Ah, I see you have the machine that goes ping. This is my favorite. You see we lease it back from the company we sold it to and that way it comes under the monthly current budget and not the capital account.
modified 31-Aug-21 21:01pm.
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I had a similar issue on Windows 7 once with Chrome. I had to completely uninstall it and then install the latest version (rather than just upgrading it).
Might not be the same as your problem, but it might be worth a go as it's pretty quick to do.
Ah, I see you have the machine that goes ping. This is my favorite. You see we lease it back from the company we sold it to and that way it comes under the monthly current budget and not the capital account.
modified 31-Aug-21 21:01pm.
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I think you are right and will do that later when I get home.
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How does this having anything to do with Win10? It sounds like it's a problem with the latest Google Chrome update.
#SupportHeForShe
Government can give you nothing but what it takes from somebody else. A government big enough to give you everything you want is big enough to take everything you've got, including your freedom.-Ezra Taft Benson
You must accept 1 of 2 basic premises: Either we are alone in the universe or we are not alone. Either way, the implications are staggering!-Wernher von Braun
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Well, I didn't know at the time.
And, I am running Windows 10 and...
... I love to blame Win10!!!
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I'm also suspicious of your hard drive. Trying to force sectors out-of-service turns out to be much harder than it appears.
RE: Chrome.
Even with Windows 7 and 8.1 and now 10, I've had such problems with Chrome--especially which really high resource usage--I no longer use it (except on my Android phone and lately it's been a problem there.) When I really need a fallback due to a rendering or compatibility issue, I use Edge.
Edit: In my case, I quickly narrowed down the worse Chrome problems to HTML 5.
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I have been working for my current employer for more than 5 years now. I like the workplace as my manager is nice to me and I have some level of freedom in terms of development. Only thing is being the only developer in a team I have to do most of the development work.I joined them as a .NET developer but now doing lot of other dev work. Development team's size is 2 including my manager (he works on other technologies like EDI and Java and keep people away from bugging me too much.) for a company of 800+. Over the years team has gone down in size from 5 to 2 due to redundancies. Some work gets outsourced to other agencies but most of the time it is in-house development. At the moment I do report development,any .NET based application development, ERP customization, cloud integration development, sometime java development and now getting into Salesforce development and soon will be doing some OCR development as well. Too many diverse technologies each with its own tool set. It feels like wearing too many hats. I am not complaining as I can manage all this at the moment.
Just curious to know,How many hats are you wearing ?
Zen and the art of software maintenance : rm -rf *
Maths is like love : a simple idea but it can get complicated.
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My current job does not ask me to wear these many hats (for now). I am sticking to MS technologies and RDBMS databases. I just need to do some estimations, architecture, design, development and some testing. I am not really limited to one thing in MS technologies. I do desktop, web, services and reports.
My previous job was extremely diverse compared to this. I was dealing with VB6, .Net framework (both web and windows), SAP, OPC, range of ETL tools, consulting, documentation, deployments and whatever else comes to mind. We were 3 people team when I started so we had to do everything ourselves.
"It is easy to decipher extraterrestrial signals after deciphering Javascript and VB6 themselves.", ISanti[ ^]
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You sound like a government worker, such as I. My agency is around 4000, but because of silos, my department only has 4 developers, but only myself and a woman contribute anything.
The hats I wear are .Net developer (mostly web forms), SSIS, system administration, SQL Server DBA, SSRS reports, Open Office reports, Oracle PL/SQL, and even a little Oracle DBA work in a Linux environment. My last little project was a purge of 10 years of records from an Oracle database, along with 100 GB of attached documents on a network share. It wasn't too bad doing it in SSIS, but the sleeplessness comes from the potential disaster of having to roll everything back and restore the Oracle schema in a Linux environment. The previous big project was SSIS and the next project, which will be super cool, starting in about 6 months, will be a .Net Core web application. So I'm crossing my fingers at the potential of some fun and gratifying development.
The problem with this is I used to be a really good lead developer, but now I wear so many hats, my skill set has become watered down. I've only done 1 small MVC app and nothing for mobile. I don't study much anymore, because I feel it is for naught, though I do hit CP quite often; which is good. I do make good money, but I have become trapped in an organization that I do not like and cannot leave because it is too much of a risk. I am thinking of doing the .Net certifications for .Net Core starting this spring so maybe I can market myself and try and find a more fulfilling position at another company.
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Tony Foo wrote: I don't study much anymore, because I feel it is for naught
Learning on your own with technologies you're interested in should never be for naught. At the very least it demonstrates your ability to learn outside of a forced environment which is a skill often overlooked imho. How HR views this I haven't the slightest but anyone even mildly competent in a language/framework will recognize the ability of someone who's competent in multiple. Think of it this way: the more languages/frameworks you're comfortable (or previously experienced) with the greater chance of getting out of a job you seem to dislike
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I have a different point of view when it comes to learning some other technology that I am not really using at work.
So, I did some training and certifications for some cloud providers. But reality is that I have never used them professionally. Now, I might as well put certifications on my resume but it holds no real value IMHO.
So, unless I get a proper road map for near future, I intend not to dive in to new technologies. May be it is just me, but I forget things entirely if I don't use them.
"It is easy to decipher extraterrestrial signals after deciphering Javascript and VB6 themselves.", ISanti[ ^]
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From my point of view, it's something that is done to satisfy a personal demand. You want to learn, you learn, maybe it gets you a job, maybe it doesn't. From the point of view of someone looking to change jobs, you can either show work in that new area supplemented by tangential experience to help your case or do nothing. Either way unless satisfied in your current area and uninterested in others, learning new technology is beneficial
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Thanks. I love .Net development and used to study or write my own stuff most nights of the week, up until a few years ago when I started wearing a lot of different hats. Web development got me interested in IT nearly 20 years ago, but what I did not say is that I worked 6 to 7 days a week on a reporting project since July with a deadline of January. It was a failed project that was dropped on me by the execs and I was told to be the PM and lead. It was not a lot of fun, to say the least; plus I get to do my System and DBA tasks as well. I'm currently burned out, but starting to freshen a bit and read articles again. We'll see; hopefully the passion will come back.
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You don't also play PowerShell guru for the organization, security analyst, SysAdmin, and modernization advocate?
Lucky government employee :p
"There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies and statistics."
- Benjamin Disraeli
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I decide the technologies on the Microsoft side and do some system administration, but not hardware. No Powershell, I can get along without it, but do still use RoboCopy a lot.
I am not lucky being a government employee. I am slightly above average, but no where near a guru. The government employees that are lucky are the ones that don't want more at work or in life. I want more and I have ambition; so I rant from time to time because government jobs can be very depressing.
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No, but you're lucky FOR a government employee, in that you have less hats to wear than I do :p
"There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies and statistics."
- Benjamin Disraeli
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There aren't enough hats going round to cover the number I try [/forced] to wear, that's the downside of being boss on the facility. There aren't even hats that cover some of the stuff I have to get involved with.
Makes for a very interesting job at times.
The best hat however is the "I am on time off for 3 weeks hat" that I get to wear for 6 months of the year.
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Two: The Freelancer and the Job Seeker.
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