My "freeze" symptoms go back before the mid-December release by Malwarebytes of the 483 (and newer) component group which many feel is somehow responsible or a contributing factor for these freezes. So I'm not convinced.
At first I tried just disabling the "web protect" feature on the latest MBAM version, since that was mentioned as a possible lesser extreme fallback workaround. It was this "web protect" feature in the newer component package that was believed to be the culprit. Unfortunately I still had a freeze.
So I uninstalled and reinstalled the next older product version (I got my copy from Bleeping Computer which has an ongoing discussion about this whole "freeze" topic) but the same version is also available from Malwarebytes themselves. This older product version includes 482 of the component package, which is purported to be "freeze-causing free". I will say it seems much stabler, and I've now had only one freeze since going back-level. But I'm still not entirely sold.
I have actually replaced one of my home-built desktop machines which physically died (I think I destroyed the motherboard, or CPU, or PSU) because of all the hard power-rebooting I had to do because of the many freezes throughout the day. Turns out the freezes persisted even with the brand new Lenovo M910t that replaced it (with Win7 pre-installed by Lenovo) so I'm convinced it's something else in either the software I install, or Windows Updates from the past few months, or my LAN and other PC's on it, etc.
Also, my two home-built desktop machines were ASUS boards (P8Z77-V Pro, and Z170-Deluxe), and both run Windows Media Center with Ceton and Hauppauge TV tuner cards inside, and both exhibited freezes. One had a 5-year old Win7 and the other was less than 2-years old. I tried reinstalling Win7 from scratch on the P8Z77 and miraculously it was freeze-free for a few days. I thought "that's a miracle". But then it started freezing again. And then it died.
I've now replaced the P8Z77 "dead" machine with a brand new Lenovo M910t and , and still see freezes. So it's not the old or new hardware itself I'm convinced.
I'm more suspicious of "network interference", because I can "see the freeze coming on" if I happen to be watching a TV program from one of the HTPC's when the freeze situation arises. I can see the picture freeze on the TV, I can see the WMC extender become completely unresponsive, and it looks very similar to a "network congestion" event.
Even more suspicious, the freeze usually takes out BOTH of my desktop machines on the LAN. How can that be unless there's some network component? I've seen "rapidly blinking lights on the router" as if one or both of the machines was simply "spewing out data from its NIC", like a denial-of-service attack on my LAN. What caused that? Who knows.
I've typically had problems re-booting one desktop machine when not realizing the other desktop machine had also frozen. When the re-booting machine gets to the point in its startup process where it needs to go out to connect to network drives it hangs, because it's obviously "confused" by the status of the other machine (which has frozen to all human attempts at interaction, but perhaps may still be able alive and running and able to cry out for help somehow to its partners on the LAN). If I then go to the second machine and either power it off or go through its own re-boot, well now the first machine magically continues normally with its re-boot in progress, and the desktop finally comes up normally!
So it appears the problem is exacerbated with multiple Win7 machines on the LAN. Certainly seems Windows Media Center is almost always the visiblity mechanism (at least it's easy to notice when a freeze occurs here), although I've had freezes outside of viewing or recording periods. Just sitting idle, or early in the re-boot process when it hasn't even completed putting out the desktop... I've seen freezes here as well.
I thought it might have to do with the large number of external USB-connected devices I have (mostly USB 2.0 mice, printers, scanner, Motorola Tuning Adapter, etc., and some USB 3.0 hard drives used for regular backups). So I've tried powering off anything that I wasn't actually always needing... but that really didn't help.
I've swapped routers, replaced one of my Ceton tuner cards, tried different USB mice, reinstalled Win7 from scratch, even replaced the now-dead ASUS machine with a completely brand new Lenovo-built M910t, and still I get the freezes. I will admit it does appear much better these past few days once backing out to the older Malwarebyte version with 482 component, but it's still not perfect.
I'm going out of town for a week and can't stand the possibility of my primary HTPC/DVR freezing while I'm away. So I've taken the extreme step of shutting down the second machine for the week. There's nothing it does or that I need to access remotely that I can't live without or access equally well from my primary HTPC. Since it does appear that things are much more stable with only one machine running and no other network activity that's how I'll run for this week, and fingers crossed I get all of my Australian Open Tennis recordings successfully made.
My network consists of a primary Netgear Nighthawk R7800 router, and six Netgear switches (GS105 and GS108) around the house. All CAT6 ethernet cable run throughout the house... I don't use wireless except for my phone and on rare occasion one of my laptops. Two desktop machines (both Win7 HTPC) are on 24/7, and two laptops (Lenovo P70 and Lenovo W530, both running Win10) are on occasionally, typically via wired ethernet but occasionally wireless. NIC in all the machines is Intel (not Realtek or other). All machines are at latest Windows Update levels as are all drivers and software products.
This has been going on for me for at least three months now. Prior to that I had 100% reliable performance from ALL machines forever. Never saw one such "freeze" symptom ever, until about 3 months ago. I never thought about reliability when recording five different Olympics 2-week periods with extremely busy recorder activity day and night on multiple channels at once, and also watching recordings on TV while multiple new recordings were going on. Same hardware, for years... but three months ago it suddenly started freezing.
Fingers crossed that my brand new M910t HTPC (now alone on the network) remains up and operative all this week while I'm away.