60-70% this is laughable and even more so at 90-95% under what you call normal usage. 95% ram usage would impact performance extremely and would make that system almost unresponsive. I tried in a VM just an hour ago with 2gb ram 4 core with just windows 11 Pro 22621.755 and Firefox 106.0.2 installed and it was on average pinning ram in the 70+ percent range with Firefox open and a single tab, no extensions, increased that to 80-85% I installed Ublock Origin, cookie auto delete and that increased it to 90%. When loading a webpage with heavy scripting say, yahoo.com, or google.com, or facebook.com, or reddit.com the browser became unresponsive to the point I had to kill the main Firefox process to regain usage.
I did, Installed both Chrome and Firefox, Noticed some 1~2 sec lag while switching between tabs (sometimes only), Can handle 5~6 tabs, Youtube playback runs smooth, no problem here, also smooth Scrolling and browsing, and reddit also works fine. Defender is on, i have not done any tweaks to improve performance besides disabling startup apps. Suggest some tweaks if there are some
[Taskbar] The change that adds Task Manager to the context menu when right-clicking on the taskbar is now available to all Windows Insiders in the Beta Channel. Have updated to 22623.875 and still don't have this. Anyone else?
use reg edit or make a reg key and merge & restart pc Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00 [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\FeatureManagement\Overrides\4\1887869580] "EnabledState"=dword:00000002 "EnabledStateOptions"=dword:00000000
3 pointless comments in a row could just done them all in 1 and say what ya were even about to begin with
Windows Explorer caches DLLs (Dynamic-Link Libraries) in memory for a period of time after the application using them has been closed. This can be an inefficient use of memory. 1. Find the key [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer]. 2. Create a new sub-key named 'AlwaysUnloadDLL' and set the default value to equal '1' to disable Windows caching the DLL in memory. 3. Restart Windows for the change to take effect.
Searching on the web i found this about the registry key: "Note that the registry key is only supported on Windows prior to Windows 2000, so for Windows XP and Vista, the sub-key is useless and unnecessary, and can be safely deleted." idk if this is real or not
I have been trying to find an ISO of 11 LTSC or IoT, can anyone tell me if they exist & if so, where to download?
Windows 11 LTSC does not exist yet, Windows 11 IoT can be downloaded from the link at the end of this post: https://forums.mydigitallife.net/th...hannel-ni_release.85327/page-159#post-1760484
Success! Thanks, this did the trick. Strange I had to do it though and wasn't activated automatically, according to .875 release notes.
Does anyone have the generic serial for 11 Iot, it's demanding a serial and there is no way to skip it.