hello
1st time poster!
i believe that obsolete tasks in my scheduler caused hyper transport sync flood errors: i can't be certain but i've been experiencing SFEs since early april and researched the condition to the point of exhaustion without success. just this past week however and after close scrutiny, i deleted quite a few obsolete tasks from the scheduler and i haven't experienced a sync flood error since.
from what i understand from my own observations, a task [for auto updates and whatnot etc] is automatically created in the scheduler each time an app is downloaded; eg real player, downloader, when downloaded, a task was automatically created in order to update that program at whatever specific time and date.
but the program itself didn't work as anticipated, and so i unistalled and reinstalled it several times without realising that several separate update tasks in sets of 3 were scheduled each and every time WITHOUT any of the tasks being removed each time i uninstalled it. so, my task scheduler attempted to update an obsolete program at varying specific times when no program linked to that task was actually available.
my belief is that at whatever time my computer suffered a HTSFE, it resulted from obsolete tasks making an attempt to 'update' when there was no corresponding program to update.
discussion? i'd be happy to hear from anyone with any point of view
i believe that obsolete tasks in my scheduler caused hyper transport sync flood errors: i can't be certain but i've been experiencing SFEs since early april and researched the condition to the point of exhaustion without success. just this past week however and after close scrutiny, i deleted quite a few obsolete tasks from the scheduler and i haven't experienced a sync flood error since.
from what i understand from my own observations, a task [for auto updates and whatnot etc] is automatically created in the scheduler each time an app is downloaded; eg real player, downloader, when downloaded, a task was automatically created in order to update that program at whatever specific time and date.
but the program itself didn't work as anticipated, and so i unistalled and reinstalled it several times without realising that several separate update tasks in sets of 3 were scheduled each and every time WITHOUT any of the tasks being removed each time i uninstalled it. so, my task scheduler attempted to update an obsolete program at varying specific times when no program linked to that task was actually available.
my belief is that at whatever time my computer suffered a HTSFE, it resulted from obsolete tasks making an attempt to 'update' when there was no corresponding program to update.
discussion? i'd be happy to hear from anyone with any point of view
My Computer
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
- Harris Technology demo build: DKT 600
- OS
- Win7 Pro x64, v.6.1.7601, SP1 | Office 2010 ProPlus
- CPU
- AMD Phenom™ II X6 1055T Processor (2800 MHz)
- Motherboard
- Foxconn
- Memory
- 12288 MB RAM
- Graphics Card(s)
- idk
- Hard Drives
- +ssd
- Antivirus
- ESET: v6
- Browser
- IE9, Google Chrome
