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<font face="Calibri">Yup!<br>
<br>
We generally do patching once a month and with that, obviously a
reboot is required. Running to this kind of schedule seems to
remove most issues.<br>
<br>
</font>
<div class="moz-signature"><font face="Calibri">Regards,<br>
<b>Daniel Pearson</b><br>
<font color="Red" size="1">Flashware Solutions Ltd</font><br>
<font size="1">London, UK / Perth, AU / Guinea & Liberia
(West Africa)<br>
+44 (0) 7857 147 620 | <a class="moz-txt-link-abbreviated" href="mailto:daniel@flashware.net">daniel@flashware.net</a></font></font></div>
<br>
On 14/03/2012 8:06 AM, Kai wrote:
<blockquote
cite="mid:1265849908.5446861331712362502.JavaMail.root@zim-store03.web.westnet.com.au"
type="cite">
<pre wrap="">General observation in my workplace which is predominantly Windows environment, when a remote server's been up for a month or so and feedback is that logons and general performance is slow, first thing I hear the tech say is "we'll just give it a reboot, if that doesn't clean things up then we'll look further..."
Is that a widespread attitude with Windows servers?
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