I have a question, and since we can download 40 M / bits, my computer is having problems. No matter if I download something from Steam or somewhere else, as soon as the direction 30-40 M / Bit's is going on, the audio system starts to cause problems, no matter if Netflix / Youtube or music, the audio starts to jitter and there are gaps up to 2-3 seconds. Even my mouse starts to jerk. Does anyone know why this is?
(System Info: 4 different hard drives, all drivers are up to date, CPU GPU ram and hard drives never go up to 80% -100%)
Where did you get the information about the utilization levels? Are these just the current values or values from the past?
If no values from the past: start the resource monitor and look at "Overview" if "cut off peaks" are displayed here.
Do you have a malware monitor (antivirus program) that checks this file every time you access files? Do you have a performance "enhancer" that keeps track of how files may need to be re-sorted? Do you have a program that automatically creates backup copies?
In my experience, accessing the system disk (partition) can paralyze the entire Windows system for a few seconds if these three components are installed. (Incidentally: already somewhat ironic, who caused the performance enhancer the lion's share of disk access.)
Where do you store the downloads? Hopefully not on the system partition (where usually the user profiles are too?) Unfortunately, this is the default setting of Windows.
It is better to save downloads to a hard disk (not just a partition) reserved for data access that does not happen during normal work on the computer, such as backups and just downloads and uploads.
I only use an antivirus program called Kaspersky, I do not use an external program like, Performance Enhancer and no program that automatically backs up. The data was read live by Task Manager when I made a test download on Steam. The test download was sent to the games disk S: and not to the system disk C: (both SSD's)
Did you only read the current values or the values over the last minute? (the diagrams displayed by the Task Manager)
The resource monitor provides some information that the Task Manager does not display. The Task Manager shows more, if you can "display processes of all users".
Otherwise I can't explain it to me. Maybe you find something on the internet
Kaspersky brakes system
Thank you for your help. I temporarily disabled Kaspersky and it was up to Kaspersky.