12-09-2008 02:57 PM
12-09-2008 03:06 PM
12-14-2008 11:23 AM
12-14-2008 08:33 PM
01-08-2009 11:11 PM
This may be working for me or not. If you have Spybot installed, with the Spybot Resident Active & Teatimer that might be causing the high CPU usage. I turned off Resident & Teatimer and my system appears to working much better now.
I tried this because I noticed something in the history about teatimer being denied something.
I also installed windows sp3.
01-09-2009 12:13 AM
Nevermind...didn't work....still sucks.
I'm about to un-install norton and ask for my money back....
01-09-2009 11:34 AM - edited 01-09-2009 11:35 AM
Andric,
Can you answer the following questions for some clarification?
1) When you see high CPU usage, can you open Windows' Task Manager and see exactly what process is taking up the highest percentage of CPU?
2) Exactly when do you see this condition happening (e.g. immediately after reboot, some time after, after several hours, etc.)? Do you see this happen while you are using the computer for other tasks (i.e. not idling?)
3) Do you still have Spybot installed, or have you tried uninstalling it -- did this alleviate the problem?
Thanks.
01-15-2009 02:01 PM
I don't know what you guys did but it appears to be working better now.
the task that was running was ccSvc something
This happened after I came back from leaving my computer idle for some time, never on a reboot that fixed the problem.
Thanks for getting back to me.
01-16-2009 08:58 AM
Hello Andric,
I'm glad to see that your system is running better now.
Just for information, during idle times, Norton will automatically do certain tasks, such as scanning. We do this so we do not interfere with your normal usage of the system. Thus you will see higher than usual CPU/resource activity during the idle time. If you want, you can adjust this through the settings. Click on the "CPU usage" link on top of the System/Norton usage graphs. Here you can change the idle time settings (e.g. time interval).
01-16-2009 03:17 PM
