I went through an painstakingly updated all the drivers. At first, I thought maybe it was an issue with USB, but further testing showed it was happening across all drives in the system (one SSD, two spinning disks, the two USB 3.0 drives, and the external eSATA RAID array). It would start out around 100MB/s, but then drop to 8-9 MB/s until I canceled the transfer. I am trying to copy roughly 2.5TB of movies from a five disk RAID5 array in a port-multiplier enclosure (via a RocketRAID 2314 card) to a 4TB Seagate USB 3.0 external drive. I'm having the same issues, though not consistently. I registered just to add to, and follow this thread. Has anyone encountered this problem after a clean install? I'm really tempted to do a clean install of the OS. Now that the desktop secondary drive is on a different port set, it has nearly the same throughput as the laptop secondary drive. I also have an HP laptop with a WD secondary drive and an 840Pro OS drive. I'll have to research the symptoms a bit more before I get a good idea as to what is really going on. Something is definitely holding it back, and it's tied to Windows 10 and the particular upgrade path and/or the driver set being used. Just for giggles I turned the Marvell controller on (never has been reliable on my board) and tested throughput. The secondary shares the 3Gb/s with a blu-ray drive: After using the Magician benchmark tool quite a bit today, the results seem a little too random to be reliable. The OS SSD is now the only drive on the Intel 6Gb/s port(s) it had slight gains on IOPS (not worth showing). It isn't near what it should be, but it's serviceable. Welp, I was wrong, changing the port had a drastic effect. Keep in mind that this is with Rapid Mode enabled, and I had to use the 4.4-4.7 method of installation/update to get it working, so it might not be connected at all. It might also be worth noting that my SSD IOPS has been chopped nearly in half since the upgrade: After that I'm ready to just wipe the drive and do a clean install. My next move is to switch cables and move the drive to another SATA port, but I doubt it will make any difference. The chipset drivers have been updated with the latest Intel has to no effect. At the very least the results should be comparable, but they are not even close: I searched for more comprehensive testing software and tripped over a thread of someone using the same model HDD. It went through a ~13 hour diagnostic with the manufacturer utility software and came out flying colors. The WD 2TB drive that is averaging 13MB/s on read and 70MB/s on write with Crystal Disk Mark. Since the OS drive is an SSD I have quite a lot of programs using both drives and it's really been interfering with my productivity. 8 second to 2 minute startup, one or the other at random. Even though it's not long, it would be nice to have a standard image, either on. Hi All,What is your favorite Desktop Imaging solution at the moment?For now, I have scripted with Powershell to improve the time it takes to set up a computer out of the box. Hi All,I am testing LAPS in my network with 2 workstations.OS: Windows 10Server : 2019 (DC)Created GPO Called LAPS to Enable Local Administrator account, Installing the LAPS MSI, and LAPS settings.Assigned this GPO to Test OU with my test PC's. I believe the real meaning behind this day is to remind us all. While smiling is, of course, what first comes to mind. We made it to Friday, October 7th! Not only is it Friday, but it is also World Smile Day.
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