Use the Spike in Word to cut multiple blocks of text or other content and paste them elsewhere in the document or into another Word document. The Spike is similar to the actual physical spike used in many restaurants: when you have paid your bill, it's stuck on the spike with other paid bills. Similarly, you can place multiple items to the Spike and then paste all that content at once. The Spike is different from the Windows clipboard, which only stores one copied item at a time.

If you want to paste the content in the Spike to multiple places or documents, type spike and press Enter to paste all of it at the current location without emptying the Spike. Repeat this anywhere you need the content.


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I have a server that's mysteriously using up a lot of CPU late at night, when it shouldn't be under heavy load. This causes some database calls to time out, and I've set up some alerts in PerfMon to trigger if CPU usage goes over 50% and this seems to coincide with the CPU spikes coincide with the database time outs.

I suspect that it's a scheduled task of some sort, but I've looked at the Windows and SQL Server scheduled tasks list and don't find anything. The Windows event logs only contain the database time outs and PerfMon entries indicating that CPU usage has spiked.

We have been facing an issue with a domain controller (Windows Server 2008 R2, VM on ESX 5.0) over the past week. Around twice a day, the CPU spikes at 100% for about 10 minutes. We notice because we receive an alert from the hypervisor, but by the time we can actually log in to check what process is causing it, it would have come back to normal. There doesn't seem to be any pattern re times, its quite erratic. Sometimes at 08:00AM, sometimes at 01:00AM, 4:00AM, 7:00PM, etc. Also nothing in the Event Logs.


It's not a big deal but I just want to know if I can somehow record the process history, to see which process was stuck at 100% at a certain time. I know about Performance Monitor (perfmon) but it doesn't really meet my requirements since it doesn't record the actual processes (e.g. AV.exe, svchost.exe, chrome.exe, etc).

I don't think you understood my question. I know about perfmon, but like I said in my OP it doesn't meet my requirements as it doesn't tell me specifically which process/application/exe actually cause the CPU spike.

Linux VMs are working fine - with 5 Linux VMs the IO delay is 0.5 to 1% most of the time. But when I start the windows VM it spikes too much. So times in 65% as well. This causes other VMs to become very slow.

The Resource performance score is an overall performance rating (from 0 to 100) for all the Cloud PCs that you manage. This score is a weighted average of CPU spike time score and RAM Spike time score.

Something to try:In the event viewer do a save as on the logs and open them up on another machine so you'll have time to look at them. Do this by selecting the log you want to save and selecting actions - save as. If you save them as the default file format you can open them up in the event viewer on another machine. I think even a windows desktop. You can also save them as a .csv.

Today I was doing a 2x20 FTP workout. at random times, I was getting consistent resistance spikes from the trainer. I was trying to hold 195W and once every few minutes the resistance would crank up and zwift would tell me I was doing 149W. just for one second. The timing of these spikes was seemingly random. Same thing happened when doing an FTP test a couple of days ago.

As a quick test I used some tape to pull the shroud which houses the sensor closer to the flywheel and that seems to have done the trick. I was getting 5 - 10 resistance spikes per 5-minute block yesterday. Today I rode 85 minutes without a single spike.

These changes are really nice for me because I get some of the power-features of PowerShell, plus the familiar commands of unix/bash. Plus tabs for having several command windows open at once. When working with grunt and git and a lot of other command line tools all day, this is invaluable.

Using our DVR-esque interface, you will never miss a spike! The software is always recording in the background, so you can play back that response you just saw in real-time. Need to save it for later so you can show your friends? You can record the data directly in our app.

We are having Windows servers spiking the CPU randomly; suddenly CPU spikes to 100% in all the servers at the same time, this is ~25 servers experience the issue simultaneously. All the servers have Symantec Endpoint Protection ver 12.1.6318.6100 installed. The issue is sporadic (happens once every 2 or 3 weeks) and unfortunately it cannot be reproduced at will.

Figure 5. Single postsynaptic action potentials paired with EPSPs induce STDP in adult human hippocampal neurons. (A) Schematic representation of the experiment with example traces. (B) Input resistance during the entire recording period. (C,D) Single-spike pairing did not alter EPSP amplitude, but induced a small but significant change in slope.

I had this 750Ti for quite a while now and it has been running fine now i was playing paladins and the GPU usage spiked on it's own to 100% (it never do that in this game) And i got a HUGE FPS drop.


Like 30 fps just gone, I quit the game and everytime i open a tab or window the GPU usage spikes to 50 or sometimes 90 and goes down in a minute and it makes the window flicker a bit. Like as if the framerate of the window is bad when clicking it from the task bar.


I have only encountered this today and CPU usage is low and normal RAM is okay. Vram is fine....


So ? What is that ?


Thanks in advance.

The only way to see what is causing it, is by either tracing a log if the behaviour is irregular and causes a error or by actively logging the proces that is consuming GPU. Keep in mind that browser based mining is a issue that affects websites that deliberately choose to add this to enhance their revenue. It doesn't matter if the use the HTTP or HTTPS protocol. Furthermore it would be normal that PC usage stays low at idle, since that spike will only occur if the website that causes it is actually open. You can read about the CPU using variation over here: -technology/2017/11/drive-by-cryptomining-that-drains-cpus-picks-up-steam-with-aid-of-2500-sites/ .

Same here, I opened a session and without doing anything there are massive spikes, I have reported similar before but this is a fuller session and the spikes are crazy, switching to CB11 and everything is fine again. There is something seriously wrong with CB12 (Windows 11, 64G DDR5 i9 12900k)

I know electricity prices went up (in Slovenia 300%) but if you want to work without spikes what we all want we need to optimise. I have all my Power cores fixed to 4900mhz and eff cores to 3700. When I open HW monitor core frequency stays the same all the time. If it jumps cpu asio has up and downs. So I turned off hypertrading too, it brings maybe some additional peace to your DAW, but only little, Im not so 100% but have a good feeling. Try also speed step, or test first with HW monitor like you set it now if cpu seets already now on same freq.

Latencymon all green, no issues even after running for over 60 minutes. I even bought an AMD GPU to replace my nVidia GPU since Latencymon was showing high issues with their drivers.

I have disabled C-State, Simultaneous Multi-threading (SMT), implemented MSI fix for DPC HDAud.sys Latencymon spike, turned on Steinberg Audio Power. I have erased and installed Windows / the system more than once. No improvement.

Throughout our lifetime, activity-dependent changes in neuronal connection strength enable the brain to refine neural circuits and learn based on experience. Synapses can bi-directionally alter strength and the magnitude and sign depend on the millisecond timing of presynaptic and postsynaptic action potential firing. Recent findings on laboratory animals have shown that neurons can show a variety of temporal windows for spike-timing-dependent plasticity (STDP). It is unknown what synaptic learning rules exist in human synapses and whether similar temporal windows for STDP at synapses hold true for the human brain. Here, we directly tested in human slices cut from hippocampal tissue removed for surgical treatment of deeper brain structures in drug-resistant epilepsy patients, whether adult human synapses can change strength in response to millisecond timing of pre- and postsynaptic firing. We find that adult human hippocampal synapses can alter synapse strength in response to timed pre- and postsynaptic activity. In contrast to rodent hippocampal synapses, the sign of plasticity does not sharply switch around 0-ms timing. Instead, both positive timing intervals, in which presynaptic firing preceded the postsynaptic action potential, and negative timing intervals, in which postsynaptic firing preceded presynaptic activity down to -80 ms, increase synapse strength (tLTP). Negative timing intervals between -80 to -130 ms induce a lasting reduction of synapse strength (tLTD). Thus, similar to rodent synapses, adult human synapses can show spike-timing-dependent changes in strength. The timing rules of STDP in human hippocampus, however, seem to differ from rodent hippocampus, and suggest a less strict interpretation of Hebb's predictions. 006ab0faaa

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