tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7969411999874786246.post1217202401234812012..comments2023-09-08T07:46:35.159-05:00Comments on charlie's blog: Coders at Workcharliehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10132442041156261244noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7969411999874786246.post-52297688875759907682011-05-09T21:24:43.061-05:002011-05-09T21:24:43.061-05:00Enjoyed this post :) I had an outdated feed for y...Enjoyed this post :) I had an outdated feed for your blog somehow, so it never showed in my reader - glad I have that corrected now. I liked the King Midas analogy in particular.Roice Nelsonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11303336118982649682noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7969411999874786246.post-73624488255204837392010-07-14T06:54:43.735-05:002010-07-14T06:54:43.735-05:00Hi Charlie,
This isn';t a comment on this blo...Hi Charlie,<br /><br />This isn';t a comment on this blog post but rather a question about a post you made at serverfault.com regarding the priority problems when running scheduled tasks. I couldn't figure out any other way to contact you.<br />I have similar problems and, like you, changing the priority in the task scheduler has only gotten me part way there. I believe I also need to be able to set memory priority. You mentioned in that post the possibility that you could create a utility for this purpose and I'm wondering if you may have done so.<br />In addition to setting the memory priority, an ideal utility from my perspective woule be one I could run in a batch file run by the task scheduler that would set all priorities to be the same as if I had run the batch file interactively. IOW, if this could all be done in one utility instead of editing the task scheduler xml it would be highly useful.Tom Bergmanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00593380389771001101noreply@blogger.com