Data carrier always at 100%, although no programs are started. What to do?

Va
4

Umzwar is on my laptop, when I look in the Task Manager, the disk utilization ALWAYS at 100% although I have not even started a program. Have already disabled Superfetch and all programs from the startup list down / disabled.

Here system information:

Intel (R) _Core (TM) _i5-7200U_CPU _ @ _ 2.50GHz up to 3.6ghz

Graphics Cards: Nividia 940MX and Intel HD Graphics 620

Windows 10 64bit

8gb ram and 2tb hard drive, no ssd

Le

ALWAYS? - Can it be that someone of you has initiated the Biltlocker drive encryption on Windows and this is not yet completed? - It is then quite normal that the volume size is displayed incorrectly during the process. In that case, it's about the size display, not the load on I / O operations.

Otherwise, I do not know that accesses to the drive cause a 100% utilization.

Ma

Disk utilization has nothing in common with the services and programs that are actively working in Windows.

Just imagine an empty glass. Kipp just a limo in. At some point it is full, more is no longer in the glass, it would overflow. It is similar for a hard disk. It has a certain capacity given by partitioning and formatting. If this is achieved just get the message. One should rather check all partitions and see what is very full, this time "clearing out".

Sh

Once a month, Microsoft provides new updates and patches.

Every few months there's also a new subversion of the NET Framework.

When this is installed, Windows then launches an application that implements the new framework into the existing one and optimizes the libraries. For this it has to open and rewrite about 100,000 small files.

That lasts on a lame computer ever a few hours and occupies the hard drive with load. Especially if there's no SSD in the system, but a conventional HDD.

So: wait and let go. And do not start wiping around in the system wildly and without a clue

Sh

Achso: The crucial point I forgot to mention:

If this process is interrupted by restarting or stopping the service, Windows restarts it after the next reboot.