The pathetic way Windows Defender works, I doubt it takes a lot of bandwidth.

Rory

From: Af [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Mathew Howard
Sent: Thursday, March 16, 2017 8:13 AM
To: af
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Windows 10 update speed

It's definitely better than it was for awhile, but we've had a couple customers 
complaining that "their connection never works" in the last couple weeks, and 
when I checked it was the same old thing with a couple dozen TCP connections to 
13.x.x.x IP addresses completely killing the connection. At least one of them 
said there was an update going, but it could very well be something like 
Windows Defender.

On Thu, Mar 16, 2017 at 10:08 AM, Adam Moffett 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
I think they changed something.  Windows 10 updates used to cripple my home 
connection, but lately I haven't noticed them.

I have recently had an incident where some Windows system process is 
downloading something from a Microsoft IP address and that download crippled 
me.  Settings -> Updates & Security didn't indicate any update was downloading. 
 I think I eventually determined it to be the Windows Defender that was doing 
the downloading, but I don't remember how I concluded that.




------ Original Message ------
From: "Nate Burke" <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
To: "Animal Farm" <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Sent: 3/16/2017 10:20:30 AM
Subject: [AFMUG] Windows 10 update speed
So it seems like when a customer wants to update a windows 10 machine, it will 
gladly and readily take all available bandwidth (and more).  I'm updating 2 
brand new windows 10 machines in the NOC, plugged into gigabit Ethernet, and 
they're downloading the windows updates at <2mb/s.  I would have expected them 
to just fly.


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