deject wrote:Why are you doing that? Out of principle? It doesn't really affect anything to have it running all the time, not even performance on anything close to a noticeable level.
Principle and performance. That and I like my list of processes to be short as possible. Allows me to keep an eye on it on the offchance something nasty crops up.
Same reason why I go into my registry now and again an nuke most of the startup Run folders.
There's also no reason why things like Adobe Reader or MS Office need to be running their quickstart services/apps in the background considering how little I use it, or that things like Quicktime and Adobe updaters are sitting running on the off chance there's an update (which I'll be told about next time I run the programs anyway).
Also while most of these individual processes/services use bugger all, they do start adding up both in memory and CPU cycles (polling etc..).