Hi Tushar

I am Dave, an Independent Advisor, I will help you with this . . .

In Windows 10, it is normal to have many, many versions of Scvhost (70+) running all the time, Windows 10 is multi-threaded and a lot of the processes in Windows are divided down into small processes so that can run on the different cores in the processor, and this actually keeps the system running fast, and does not slow your system

The processes you can control are as follows:

Turn off all unnecessary startup applications and processes:

Press Ctrl + Shift + Esc to open Task Manager

Click on the Startup Tab

See any non-essential items are listed there

If so, select and click 'Disable'

Close Task Manager

Click your Start Button, type msconfig and hit Enter

When the System Configuration dialog opens, click on the Services Tab

Check the box marked 'Hide Microsoft Services'

In the remaining list, see any non-essential items are listed there, uncheck any you find

Click Apply and OK

Turn off all unnecessary Background Apps

Open the Settings App

Go to Privacy - Background Apps

Turn off any App you do not need running in the background

Restart your PC

Answer from DaveM121 on learn.microsoft.com
Top answer
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98

Hi Tushar

I am Dave, an Independent Advisor, I will help you with this . . .

In Windows 10, it is normal to have many, many versions of Scvhost (70+) running all the time, Windows 10 is multi-threaded and a lot of the processes in Windows are divided down into small processes so that can run on the different cores in the processor, and this actually keeps the system running fast, and does not slow your system

The processes you can control are as follows:

Turn off all unnecessary startup applications and processes:

Press Ctrl + Shift + Esc to open Task Manager

Click on the Startup Tab

See any non-essential items are listed there

If so, select and click 'Disable'

Close Task Manager

Click your Start Button, type msconfig and hit Enter

When the System Configuration dialog opens, click on the Services Tab

Check the box marked 'Hide Microsoft Services'

In the remaining list, see any non-essential items are listed there, uncheck any you find

Click Apply and OK

Turn off all unnecessary Background Apps

Open the Settings App

Go to Privacy - Background Apps

Turn off any App you do not need running in the background

Restart your PC

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60

By itself, the mere number of processes you see means nothing. What matters is what those processes are doing at any one time. It may be helpful to understand what a process is; they are designed to make your computer run faster, not slower.

Large programs are chopped up into smaller pieces called processes, so instead of loading the entire program into memory and running it all at once, the computer only needs to work with these smaller pieces.

Processes also make your computer more stable. If one of those processes runs into trouble, or crashes altogether, the rest of the program can keep on going. Were it not so, the entire program could crash, and take Windows with it.

So don't be upset by the number of processes you see - I currently have 122 processes - but be glad they're there. It's a sign that your computer is working efficiently.

By the same token, you should definitely not close processes on your own. That could make your computer unstable, or take it down. If you really feel that you must close a process, it should be because you've done your research and understand what program that process is part of, and what it does for your computer, and have determined that the process is causing harm to your computer.

But to close processes for the sole reason that you think there are too many of them is madness. Besides, they're only going to return the next time your computer is restarted.

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/windows10 › hello windows community :) is it normal to have so many background processes 2 minutes after startup?
r/Windows10 on Reddit: Hello Windows Community :) Is it normal to have so many background processes 2 minutes after startup?
January 29, 2023 - Yes, a lot of stuff (background services/ update services) starts right after boot, so you have all that, Edge, Chrome, Firefox, Defender, OneDrive, Office, iTunes, some · Gaming Launcher, are all popular programs that have some stuff running right after boot. (While you can disable most, and I had Windows 10 installs with less than 70 processes after boot, it is normally not worth it and can have unwanted side effects, and you should not mess with Services if you don't knwo what you are doing)
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/windows10 › how to close all background programs in windows?
r/Windows10 on Reddit: How to close all background programs in Windows?
August 20, 2022 -

We've all seen this happen. When you first buy a Windows PC, it seems to operate like a breeze. Programs open up and run with no difficulty.

Then after several months everything slows up. It becomes so bad that you have to buy a whole new computer. The assumption is there are some background processes that continue to run that prevent the computer from running more quickly. So how can you close all those background processes?

I know about opening the Task Manager. But there are usually so many processes running you can't tell which ones are essential for Windows to operate. I have tried shutting down some processes at random but I almost always get the warning "this is a system process and can't be shut down."

So can we shut down all those background processes so the computer is back to original pristine state and only the processes for the one program you want to run are operating?

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It becomes so bad that you have to buy a whole new computer. Why would you have to buy a new computer when you can simply clean install?
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The PC I am currently using I built in 2014. I installed Windows 8.1 at the time, and upgraded through Windows 10 until today. I think the "Windows rot" people always refer to, where they claim how WIndows gets slower over time, is really just bad maintenance. over time. People install a bunch of stuff on their machines but never take the time to "clean up" the system. It's like if you live in a house and never tidy up. It's going to start looking like shit, but nobody calls it "house rot". Some people propose reinstalling windows every X amount of time to "avoid" this problem. Which to me is sort of like buying a new house to avoid sweeping and vacuuming. But there are usually so many processes running you can't tell which ones are essential for Windows to operate. On the details tab you can see the actual executables. You can right-click them and go to their location and then check the properties of the file. You can also check Services in the services list. "Autoruns" can be used to investigate services and scheduled tasks and can filter out microsoft ones to see what other software might be plopping onto your system. A lot of programs like to slap in scheduled tasks and updater services and stuff. Did you know that Chrome install adds a scheduled task to take an inventory of all the software on your computer? Not sure if it sends it to google but I always felt it was a waste of my computers resources either way. Software like ShellExView can see/disable shell extensions. I use this to remove right-click context menu extensions because a lot of software adds itself there when it really has no purpose being there. This will also show if there are registrations for shell extensions that no longer exist- uninstalled programs that didn't properly unregister themselves. These could impact performance as Windows tries to instantiate the non-existent components.
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Microsoft Support
support.microsoft.com › en-us › windows › windows-background-apps-and-your-privacy-83f2de44-d2d9-2b29-4649-2afe0913360a
Windows background apps and your privacy - Microsoft Support
Windows 11Windows 10 · Select Start , then select Settings > Apps > Installed apps. Scroll to the desired app, select More options on the right edge of the window, then select Advanced options. In the Background app permissions section, under Let this app run in background, select one of the ...
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37

Store probably runs for doing automatic update check.

To turn it off, go to Start -> Settings -> Privacy -> Background apps and set it to Off.
More info in the article: How to Turn On or Off Background Apps in Windows 10.

You might also in this case turn off automatically-applied updates by going to
Settings -> Update & Security -> Advanced options
and set "Choose how updates are installed", to "Notify to schedule restart."

For the calculator :

I believe that this Modern app is among those that Windows 10 tends to keep in memory if used once. It probably runs in suspended mode, using very little memory, ready to be launched quickly when called, which is more useful in a tablet than a computer.

Windows might forget about it if you kill it off a few times using the Task Manager before shutting down. If this works, I advise in the future to use a third-party calculator instead of the Modern one, or it will come back.

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Disabling the SuperFetch service can prevent applications from starting on their own.

We've found out that with SuperFetch running, some applications are started in the suspended state automatically once or twice an hour, even after you explicitly kill their processes. This happens for Windows Store/Modern UI/Metro apps like Photos, Calculator, Maps, Weather, Time and so on.

How to Disable SuperFetch

From the Command Line

Run this command under Administrator:

sc config sysmain start=disabled

Additionally, stop an already running SuperFetch:

sc stop sysmain

From the UI

  1. Press Windows+R, type services.msc and press Enter.
  2. Find SuperFetch in the list, and double-click it to open its properties.
  3. Set Startup type to Disabled.
  4. (Optional.) Click Stop to stop an already running SuperFetch.

  5. Click OK to save the changes.

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How-To Geek
howtogeek.com › home › windows › these 6 windows background processes might be slowly shortening your ssd's lifespan
These 6 Windows background processes might be slowly shortening your SSD's lifespan
1 week ago - In the newly opened window, uncheck the "Automatically manage paging file size for all drives" if it is active. Then you will be able to select your SSD. Go down to where it says "No paging file", tick that box, then click "Set." This background feature is often on by default, but not always.
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How-To Geek
howtogeek.com › home › windows › stop these 6 windows background processes to reclaim your pc's performance
Stop These 6 Windows Background Processes to Reclaim Your PC's Performance
October 5, 2025 - Overwhelmed by the number of background processes in your task manager? These are a few you can turn off safely to improve performance.
Find elsewhere
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Quora
quora.com › What-background-processes-are-okay-to-kill-in-Windows-in-order-to-speed-up-my-PC
What background processes are okay to kill in Windows in order to speed up my PC? - Quora
If you know for a fact that your Java is up-to-date, it would be safe to kill the updater (but NOT any other Java processes- just the updater). This goes for other updaters, too (i.e. Adobe). Other processes include applications you closed that are trying to run in the background. For example, I’ve got the Windows 10 Money app trying to run right now.
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BleepingComputer
bleepingcomputer.com › bleepingcomputer forums › hardware › internal hardware
My computer has too many background processes and windows processes open. - Internal Hardware
November 10, 2025 - I’m not facing any major performance issues, but I got concerned because my task manager processes looked unusually high compared to what many people report online. My system has 32GB RAM, and even when I’m not running anything except Windows, memory usually stays at 45-50% and 20%cpu. I wasn’t sure if that was normal or if something unnecessary was loading at startup. Now it is 109 background processes and 112 windows processes.
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JustAnswer
justanswer.com › computer › jd6or-turned-off-privacy-settings-windows-10.html
How to Stop Unnecessary Background Processes in Windows 10 - Expert Q&A
Background processes repeatedly restart despite disabling privacy settings, causing slowdowns and high CPU usage. To stop persistent Windows 10 background processes, use Task Manager to identify resource-heavy tasks. Disable unnecessary startup ...
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Tom's Hardware Forum
forums.tomshardware.com › home › software › windows 10
Is there a way to permanently disable Windows 10 background processes with Task Manager? | Tom's Hardware Forum
June 22, 2018 - I don't get the connection between Chrome and background tasks. Windows has dozens of background apps that are controlled by going to Settings -> Privacy -> Background apps. You misunderstand, I'm talking about disabling Windows 10 operating system · startup processes in task manager.
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MakeUseOf
makeuseof.com › home › windows › how to fix too many background processes running on a windows pc
How to Fix Too Many Background Processes Running on a Windows PC
September 7, 2023 - The Windows operating system is huge, with many apps, processes, and services running simultaneously. These apps may not be visible to you in the desktop view, but you only need to open the task manager to discover many running background processes.
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Real.com
customer.real.com › hc › en-us › articles › 204039463-Close-programs-running-in-the-background-in-Windows
Close programs running in the background in Windows – SUPPORT
Solution 2: Temporarily disable background programs on Windows from Task Manager. The Windows Task Manager can close programs that the system tray cannot. Warning: If you use the End Process feature to close a program, you will lose any unsaved data in that program.
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Quora
quora.com › I-have-so-many-programs-running-in-the-background-on-my-PC-How-do-I-get-that-fixed
I have so many programs running in the background on my PC. How do I get that fixed? - Quora
· · You can press Ctrl + Shift + Esc keyboard shortcut key to open task Manager in Windows 10. In Task Manager window, you can tap Process tab to see all running applications and processes incl.
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Windows Forum
windowsforum.com › forums › windows forums › windows help and support
Windows 10 - How to Disable Unnecessary Background Processes in Windows 10 Task Manager | Windows Forum
October 12, 2019 - For example "YourPhone" is an appxpackage you can remove it from a powershell prompt with Get-AppxPackage *phone* | Remove-AppxPackage ... Apparently you need to go to Settings, Background apps to disable background processes such as YourPhone.exe.
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Kansas State University
textbooks.cs.ksu.edu › cis527 › 1-secure-workstations › 09-windows-processes-services
Windows 10 Processes & Services :: CIS 527 Textbook
June 27, 2024 - On Windows, you’ll notice that even though we aren’t running any programs, there are still dozens of processes running in the background. Most of them are what we call Services. A service is a process that runs in the background on Windows, and is usually started and managed by the operating ...
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Auslogics
auslogics.com › tech wisdom blog › how to`s › windows system › how to stop unnecessary apps running in the background on windows 10/11
How to Stop Apps Running in the Background on Windows 10/11 — Auslogics Blog
October 13, 2025 - Then, click on Task Manager on the Tool slider. ... If you don’t find Task Manager on the slider, click on All Tools and select Task Manager from there. In the Task Manager window, click on Processes .
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MiniTool
minitool.com › home › news › 4 solutions to fix too many background processes in windows 10
4 Solutions to Fix Too Many Background Processes in Windows 10 - MiniTool
March 15, 2024 - You can press Ctrl + Shift + Esc keyboard shortcut to open Task Manager in Windows 10. In Task Manager window, you can tap Process tab to see all running applications and processes incl. background processes in your computer.