| bio | website | martin.hollingsworth.name |
|---|---|---|
| location | Sydney, Australia | |
| age | 45 | |
| visits | member for | 4 years |
| seen | yesterday | |
| stats | profile views | 9 |
.NET Developer / Tech Lead
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2d |
awarded | Scholar |
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2d |
accepted | Windows Event Viewer is slow on newer versions of Windows |
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May 17 |
comment |
Windows Event Viewer is slow on newer versions of Windows I actually up voted your answer as it does add to the discussion. Just not the right answer to the scenario I was interested in. Thanks anyway @kce |
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May 17 |
comment |
Windows Event Viewer is slow on newer versions of Windows I'm well aware of the power of PowerShell, including the CmdLets for the event log but the question was really all about restoring an existing capability. I'm all for the command line as a default but sometimes a GUI just suits the browsing scenario where you don't really know exactly what you are looking for. |
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May 17 |
awarded | Self-Learner |
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May 17 |
awarded | Yearling |
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May 17 |
comment |
Windows Event Viewer is slow on newer versions of Windows It's nothing to do with the size of the logs or dividing the logs into multiple different logs. It is just the snappyness of the tool when viewing each log. I appreciate the new viewer adds support for various scenarios but I still want my primary scenario to be as good as it used to be. I found a solution to have the best of both worlds . |
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May 17 |
answered | Windows Event Viewer is slow on newer versions of Windows |
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May 17 |
asked | Windows Event Viewer is slow on newer versions of Windows |
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Jun 27 |
awarded | Autobiographer |
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May 8 |
awarded | Popular Question |
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Aug 5 |
awarded | Teacher |
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Jun 18 |
awarded | Editor |
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Jun 18 |
revised |
How to enter standby or hibernate mode in Server 2008 R2 added 102 characters in body |
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Jun 18 |
answered | How to enter standby or hibernate mode in Server 2008 R2 |
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Jun 10 |
answered | How To Disconnect Users Accessing a Windows Shared Folder using PowerShell |
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Jun 10 |
comment |
How To Disconnect Users Accessing a Windows Shared Folder using PowerShell I have used OpenFiles in the meantime but because I want to be selective about which connections I disconnect, I end up using Select-String to try and parse the output of openfiles /query /v. I think my dodgy scripting skills make this a bit fragile and it would be easier for me if I was able to deal with the connections as Objects rather than passing the string. |
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Jun 10 |
awarded | Student |
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Jun 10 |
asked | How To Disconnect Users Accessing a Windows Shared Folder using PowerShell |
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Sep 17 |
answered | Laptop waking from sleep |