For the record, a couple of days ago I performed an involuntary test.
There's this app called "Hekasoft Backup & Restore" which is great for making complete backups of apps like Thunderbird, Firefox, Brave, Chrome, etc. Every backup takes a couple of minutes (everything is saved: emails, tabs, extensions, settings, etc). During that time, I remember on my old Win 7 rig, the CPU (Core i3 530) was pushed to 100% most of the time.
So when I launched Hekasoft B&R for the first time on my new Win 11 rig (Ryzen 7700), all I had to do was to monitor the max CPU% that was displayed by the Rainmeter skin during the backup process. In my case it was 139%. So now I've changed MaxValue to 139, and I think I'm getting closer to something "reliable". It's good enough for me anyway.![Wink ;-)]()
There's this app called "Hekasoft Backup & Restore" which is great for making complete backups of apps like Thunderbird, Firefox, Brave, Chrome, etc. Every backup takes a couple of minutes (everything is saved: emails, tabs, extensions, settings, etc). During that time, I remember on my old Win 7 rig, the CPU (Core i3 530) was pushed to 100% most of the time.
So when I launched Hekasoft B&R for the first time on my new Win 11 rig (Ryzen 7700), all I had to do was to monitor the max CPU% that was displayed by the Rainmeter skin during the backup process. In my case it was 139%. So now I've changed MaxValue to 139, and I think I'm getting closer to something "reliable". It's good enough for me anyway.

Statistics: Posted by Jose Hidalgo — Today, 3:32 pm