All other nag screens I’ve ever seen show themselves when the app is run. The nag screen itself really bothers me in that it plops itself in the middle of my desktop at random times. BTW, I did finally discover another EaseUS process running which uses so little processing time that it is very likely to be the timer for the nag screen. That causes me to be deeply suspicious and concerned. It’s not about loss of 2-3% of my processor time, but rather why my computer has devoted several billion CPU cycles of processing over the last month doing something about which the creators have not said a single word. I failed to communicate well that this is what motivated my original post. Any ideas from forum members will be much appreciated. I wonder why this program, recommended in the uber-competent Windows Secrets Newsletter, appears to be so poorly written. Is this supposedly superior backup program really running my computer as a spam robot? Are the TodoUS programmers incredibly inept? Do others who have Process Internals Process Explorer and TodoUS see what I do? If there is no one on this very informed forum who is able to provide some definitive explanation, I will remove this poorly written (or malicious) program. Meanwhile, software running regular version checks in the background, as in Adobe and others, are seen using 0.01%. I have yet to use the program, but a full month later, EaseUS still consumes its 3% while all it is doing is regularly pushing a nag screen onto my desktop asking me to buy their supposedly superior product. When I first noticed that Todo EaseUS was consuming about 3% of my CPU power, I assumed that some sort of disk indexing was running in the background, and decided to wait for it finish whatever it might be doing. I use Process Explorer to see who is eating up CPU power.
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