There is some diagnostics info you can pursue here:

http://www.wintips.org/how-to-fix-svchost-exe-netsvcs-memory-leak-or-high-cpu-usage-problems/
http://www.hanselman.com/blog/FiguringOutWhyMySVCHOSTEXEIsAt100CPUWithoutComplicatedToolsInWindows7.aspx
https://miketois.wordpress.com/2012/04/16/identifying-and-fixing-the-cause-of-svchost-exe-running-at-99-cpu/

Be very cautious about disabling services to "resolve" your issue, unless
you fully understand what the apparently problematic service does.  They're
a little trigger happy with the disabling advice in that first article.

Regards,






*ASB **http://XeeMe.com/AndrewBaker* <http://xeeme.com/AndrewBaker>
*Providing Virtual CIO Services (IT Operations & Information Security) for
the SMB market…*

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On Sun, Dec 27, 2015 at 2:17 PM, Kish n Kepi <[email protected]> wrote:

> I have a 3 year old Thinkpad T430s with i7-3520M and 16 GB RAM, currently
> running a fresh install of Windows 10 Pro
>
>
>
> On my computer, over time these two Processes grow in resource
> consumption, eventually eating about 20% CPU each, thus slowing down the
> computer to the point that a reboot is necessary.
>
>
>
> Image Name                     PID Services
>
> ========================= ======== ============
>
> svchost.exe                    696 Appinfo, BDESVC, BITS, Browser,
>
>                                    CertPropSvc, DoSvc, IKEEXT, iphlpsvc,
>
>                                    LanmanServer, lfsvc, ProfSvc, Schedule,
>
>                                    SENS, SessionEnv, ShellHWDetection,
> Themes,
>
>                                    UserManager, Winmgmt, wuauserv
>
>
>
> svchost.exe                   1148 AudioEndpointBuilder,
>
>                                    DeviceAssociationService, DsSvc,
>
>                                    NcbService, PcaSvc, SmsRouter, SysMain,
>
>                                    TrkWks, UmRdpService, WdiSystemHost,
>
>                                    WlanSvc, wudfsvc
>
>
>
> Yes, it takes a week to get to the point of reboot, but honestly, I’d
> really like a way to refresh things so that I didn’t have to reboot my
> laptop more than monthly, because of
>
> Windows updates. These tasks cannot simply be ended, and several of the
> services represented cannot be restarted without booting Windows.
>
>
>
> Btw, I had the same issues running Windows 8.1
>
>
>
> Anyone know of a way to keep these two processes from becoming the
> monsters that they do, or do refresh them back to normal proportions?
>
>
>
> Kish
>

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