Normal Set
On a Windows Vista laptop, is it dangerous to set the priority of a process to "above normal"?
Windows Media Player has been running awfully slow lately, so I set the priority to "Above normal". Could this harm my computer internally or externally?
It is not Microsoft-recommended and is not good for stability - so, your computer might crash more often. Generally, changing the process priority does more harm than good.
It is unlikely that you will get any long-lasting repurcussions, however.
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