- #DISABLE ADOBE APPLICATION MANAGER WINDOWS 10 UPDATE#
- #DISABLE ADOBE APPLICATION MANAGER WINDOWS 10 MANUAL#
- #DISABLE ADOBE APPLICATION MANAGER WINDOWS 10 PASSWORD#
Scenario 1: I start typing a password into RDC to remote into a production server, and some other application steals focus as I am typing. So that is why it bothers me Win 10 will purge wholesale.Īs to CHKDSK, see my other post from tonight in this thread.Is there any way to stop applications from stealing focus? But some are useful and do no harm leaving them there. I agree that anything in temp should be able to be deleted and I’ll bet these can. In Win 7 right now I have 23 folders and 24 files outside those folders.
#DISABLE ADOBE APPLICATION MANAGER WINDOWS 10 UPDATE#
There is some discussion over whether to run it with the “/r” switch, which comes down to personal preference.Īctually Adobe does not store “licenses” in temp, but license checks, download logs, update checks etc. It is part of your toolkit to fix Windows errors. If you disable those tasks the send may fail. If your machine crashes, Windows will collect crash data and offer to send it to MS. If you have opted out then nothing will be sent. If Adobe are storing licenses in places Windows cleans up, you should complain to Adobe. This reply was modified 1 year, 3 months ago by rebop2020. Cannot confirm if this can delete restore points or not. MIGHT be the DiskCleanup task and might not be.
#DISABLE ADOBE APPLICATION MANAGER WINDOWS 10 MANUAL#
What is the AW consensus on this one now?Īnd just since I am here and typing, I spent the better part of today trying to find why Win 10 deletes manual restore points by itself.
Great example of why it is so hard to find answers to issues. When I move my computers to SSDs, I no longer check event logs for warnings of a drive failure I simply plan for a drive failure. There’s no real in-between that chkdsk might help. In my opinion, an SSD is one of those devices that either work as they should or suffer a failure severe enough to warrant replacement. That’s great, but I recommend that you do not run chkdsk on an SSD, in general. Interesting that Susan says in today’s newsletter: So it surprised me some task would make the choice what is not needed in the Temp folders. I have never seen them purged before unless I chose to do it manually. Faster and gives me more confidence not to delete them. A program I use called Secure Netterm has a log there useful to its running. Photoshop crashes (incredibly rare) stores info there. It is the results of validating licenses on Photoshop, Lightroom, Illustrator, etc. And what other tasks might not be needed.Īdobe has, for at least since CS6 (10 years?) kept a bunch of info in both Windows/Temp and Appdata/Local/Temp. So I set to see what might be running on Win 10 Tasks to do this. i should note the periodicity, but have not. This search started as my TEMP files get wiped out once or twice a month. Got a trusted site or reviewer to check for the state of these or care to discuss here? “Schedules a memory diagnostic in response to system events.”ĭisk Cleanup: I KNOW this removes some TEMP files that are worth keeping from Adobe, etc. MemoryDiagnostic \ RunFullMemoryDiagnostic MemoryDiagnostic \ ProcessMemoryDiagnosticEvents “The Windows Scheduled Maintenance Task performs periodic maintenance of the computer system by fixing problems automatically or reporting them through Security and Maintenance.” This one really worries me If what I read is true, then an SSD should NEVER have CHKDSK run.
“This task collects and uploads autochk SQM data if opted-in to the Microsoft Customer Experience Improvement Program.” Well, I have not agreed, why should these be enabled?Īpplication Experience \ ProgramDataUpdaterĬustomer Experience Improvement Program \ConsolidatorĬustomer Experience Improvement Program \UsbCeip
“Collects program telemetry information if opted-in to the Microsoft Customer Experience Improvement Program.” For example:Īll from Microsoft/Windows tasks. Or should be disabled but I’d like better confirmation than I am finding. There are some that seem so logical that are either not needed I’ve run across quite a few seemingly credible sites enumerating Services safe to disable,īut no so much for tasks.