Jump to content

  • Log In with Google      Sign In   
  • Create Account

Awesome job so far everyone! Please give us your feedback on how our article efforts are going. We still need more finished articles for our May contest theme: Remake the Classics

Is This Normal?


Old topic!
Guest, the last post of this topic is over 60 days old and at this point you may not reply in this topic. If you wish to continue this conversation start a new topic.

  • You cannot reply to this topic
7 replies to this topic

#1 The_Neverending_Loop   Members   -  Reputation: 480

Posted 25 June 2012 - 05:57 PM

Hey I wanted to get the communities opinion, I recently set up a new desktop for myself after my old one died on me. I assembled this my self with all new hardware and a new case. The thing is i kind of hear the processor revving up to much on a fresh install, and this new case does allow for more ventilation so maybe desktops always did this but i just here it more now.

Anyhow look at the screenshot and let me know your thoughs (sorry for the high resolution image).

Posted Image

Btw League Of Legends was installing not running.

Edited by The_Neverending_Loop, 25 June 2012 - 05:57 PM.


Sponsor:

#2 Cornstalks   Moderator*   -  Reputation: 5411

Posted 25 June 2012 - 06:14 PM

Meh, if you're installing things and running several programs you shouldn't be worried about spikes like that, I'd say. It's normal enough.

If you have no programs open and it's spiking like that... well then I'd the processes and find out which one was causing it to spike.
[ I was ninja'd 71 times before I stopped counting a long time ago ] [ f.k.a. MikeTacular ] [ My Blog ] [ SWFer: Gaplessly looped MP3s in your Flash games ]

#3 ApochPiQ   Moderators   -  Reputation: 7793

Posted 25 June 2012 - 06:15 PM

You're running programs. The CPU is going to show usage.

#4 The_Neverending_Loop   Members   -  Reputation: 480

Posted 25 June 2012 - 06:20 PM

The thing is that even when I have nothing extra running it still revs up, and I dont understand how google chrome and downloading LoL can cause an 8 core to go to 40%, I dont know if its me being paranoid because of my experiences with my old desktop or this is something that should be happening. (My desktop has been dead for like 4-5 months now and I've been using my laptop [which is also dieing now :-/] so I may have forgotten how desktop sound normally).

But yea since my desktop died -> laptop dieing -> I might be paranoid about my new machine dieing lol

#5 Cornstalks   Moderator*   -  Reputation: 5411

Posted 25 June 2012 - 06:29 PM

Believe it or not, Chrome can easily cause the CPU to spike (especially when you go to a new page). So can installing things (I don't know what LoL is doing, but it may be doing more than just downloading).

You've got your process monitor. Just sort the list by CPU usage and watch and see what causes it to spike.
[ I was ninja'd 71 times before I stopped counting a long time ago ] [ f.k.a. MikeTacular ] [ My Blog ] [ SWFer: Gaplessly looped MP3s in your Flash games ]

#6 szecs   Members   -  Reputation: 1677

Posted 25 June 2012 - 10:27 PM

Firefox with its plugin-container dudes likes to eat my CPU 100% (dual core). Especially on sites where there are ads and when my connection is slow.

#7 way2lazy2care   Members   -  Reputation: 633

Posted 26 June 2012 - 07:43 AM

Believe it or not, Chrome can easily cause the CPU to spike (especially when you go to a new page). So can installing things (I don't know what LoL is doing, but it may be doing more than just downloading).


I'm often surprised by how many resources chrome can use in the worst case. I've noticed flash has been buggier than it has been in the past too and can use a lot of resources before eventually crashing.

#8 mhagain   Members   -  Reputation: 3829

Posted 26 June 2012 - 01:53 PM

A rev up every now and then is normal enough. There will be plenty of background processes running on a machine, even if you're otherwise doing nothing, that can cause it - indexing services, AV, agressive auto-updaters, application tuning services, etc. Your PC has most likely just decided that since it's got some idle CPU time it might be a good idea to do something that you may find useful later on with it. It's when it doesn't go back down again after a short while that you need to start worrying!

Definitely agreed on the browsers - some heavy "modern" websites can quite easily chew up CPU time. Anything could be causing CPU spikes when downloading too; the most likely example I can think of is some agressive AV kicking in.

It appears that the gentleman thought C++ was extremely difficult and he was overjoyed that the machine was absorbing it; he understood that good C++ is difficult but the best C++ is well-nigh unintelligible.





Old topic!
Guest, the last post of this topic is over 60 days old and at this point you may not reply in this topic. If you wish to continue this conversation start a new topic.



PARTNERS