- Joined
- May 28, 2020
- Messages
- 95 (0.05/day)
- Location
- Berlin
System Name | Desktop |
---|---|
Processor | Ryzen 7 5800x |
Motherboard | Aorus B550 Elite V2 |
Cooling | Cooler Master Hyper 212X Dual Fan 82.9 CFM CPU Cooler / 5x 140mm Case Fans |
Memory | G.Skill Trident Z RGB 16 GB (2 x 8 GB) DDR4-3000 CL16 Memory |
Video Card(s) | Gigabyte GeForce RTX 3070 8 GB GAMING OC Video Card |
Storage | Western Digital Blue SN570 / Samsung 850 EVO-Series 500 SSD / 2x HDD |
Display(s) | HP Omen 27i / Samsung S24F356FHU 23.5" 1080p |
Case | Phanteks Eclipse P350X ATX Mid Tower Case |
Power Supply | Corsair RMx 850 W 80+ Gold |
Mouse | Razer Basilisk V2 |
Keyboard | Razer BlackWidow Elite RGB Wired Gaming Keyboard |
Software | Windows 11 |
Hey folks,
I recently started a job where I work from home and supply my own workstation, which is fine because I prefer my work station anyways. This job requires a lot of software that I use pretty infrequently and I noticed recently that I had a whopping 6/16GB memory usage on startup. That's no bueno for when I want to game after work on the same system.
I was thinking of dual booting Windows to totally restrict this bloat from one instance, but now I'm wondering if that's over the top and a second user would accomplish the same thing - stopping backend bloat from loading on startup. Would it?
A lot of this is registry stuff (grrr, Adobe...) many of which I can't just disable on startup to save the memory. Unfortunately I have no idea how users affect this sort of thing. If I made a work user and installed relevant programs to it exclusively would it leave my personal user unhindered? Thanks!
I recently started a job where I work from home and supply my own workstation, which is fine because I prefer my work station anyways. This job requires a lot of software that I use pretty infrequently and I noticed recently that I had a whopping 6/16GB memory usage on startup. That's no bueno for when I want to game after work on the same system.
I was thinking of dual booting Windows to totally restrict this bloat from one instance, but now I'm wondering if that's over the top and a second user would accomplish the same thing - stopping backend bloat from loading on startup. Would it?
A lot of this is registry stuff (grrr, Adobe...) many of which I can't just disable on startup to save the memory. Unfortunately I have no idea how users affect this sort of thing. If I made a work user and installed relevant programs to it exclusively would it leave my personal user unhindered? Thanks!