Any OS does an outstanding job
when it starts or reboots. While lately it only takes 5-10 seconds for a
computer to boot, but in this short time, tons of things happen. So it's not
almost Windows. It’s an equivalent with macOS, Linux. Smartphones, Smart
switches, and even the routers, but let’s mention Windows here! So how does a
computer restart help?
- Clears RAM
- Restarts crashed or overloaded processes
- Memory leaks
- Hardware Error
- Graphics issue
In the end, restarting the pc clears
the present state of the pc, and software which were causing the matter.
Restarting can even help solve the web or Network problems when it restarts,
everything starts fresh, and things look just fine. However, remember that if
it’s a drag that happens often, you'll need to search for a permanent solution.
RAM
A lot of things are stored on the
physical RAM and therefore the paged memory on the hard disc tons of footprints
and background process keeps running, and because of this it gets full, the
system gets slow, ultimately running out of fuel. Sometimes we've opened numerous
things that not much is left to even a daily function. Albeit you managed to
shut some applications. Likelihood is that things are still running the
background which will keep accumulating and leads to a memory leak. Restarting
clears RAM and provides you fresh air to breathe.
Crashed
Sometimes a process may crash or
find yourself using excessive resources and this will cause the program or
driver to crash or freeze. While restarting the program may help, restarting
the PC in most cases works bent be the simplest option.
Memory Leaks
Poorly coded programs can cause
Memory leaks, making programs or your system suffer. Restarting makes your PC
starts with a fresh start.
Hardware Errors
That’s a typical Windows issue
where you get BSOD. When Windows doesn’t know where to travel next when it gets
into a drag , it just stops. It can restart or reload the driving force because
the hardware at a coffee level is stuck. When the system reboots, it loads up
everything from scratch. It also clears of unspecified data in memory as if
nothing happened. The system will create a log for diagnosis and send it to
Microsoft servers for checks.
Graphic Issues
Suppose you're running high-end
games and tools which put tons of pressure on GPU. Something almost like what
happens with RAM, but more of a heating issue which slows down the system. If
you're trying to push the limit, it'll ultimately end in BSOD.
On one among my PCs, I even have
an old GPU, and streaming a video causes things to freeze. the sole option is
on the brink of the streaming, and restart. I sometimes need to stop streaming
for a short time so it's going to cool off.
Windows 10 has gotten better handling situations, and there are less frequent crashes than before. Sometimes
restarting a Service or process can resolve the matter , except for that, one
has got to know which service or process it's . that's the rationale many still
like better to restart than troubleshooting the matter .
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