Mysterious event repeats every 10 minutes
A mysterious event is occurring at precise 10-minute intervals, such as at 7:00, 7:10, 7:20, and so on. This event manifests as a sudden black pop-up appearing in the top left corner of my main screen, resembling the size of a command window. The appearance of the pop-up is extremely fleeting, lasting for just a fraction of a second, making it impossible to discern any content within it. Despite its brevity, this occurrence disrupts the normal sleep function of the computer. This phenomenon has persisted for a few weeks with no clear connection to any changes made to the system, which has been operating on version 11 for only a couple of months after an “upgrade” from version 7.
Upon checking the Application Event Viewer, it reveals that the Restart Manager initiates and concludes a session at these specific intervals, as indicated by Event ID 10001 and 10000.
After running Malwarebytes, it confirms the absence of any malware present on the system, while a CHKDSK scan reports that all files are in a normal state.
A mysterious event is occurring at precise 10-minute intervals, such as at 7:00, 7:10, 7:20, and so on. This event manifests as a sudden black pop-up appearing in the top left corner of my main screen, resembling the size of a command window. The appearance of the pop-up is extremely fleeting, lasting for just a fraction of a second, making it impossible to discern any content within it. Despite its brevity, this occurrence disrupts the normal sleep function of the computer. This phenomenon has persisted for a few weeks with no clear connection to any changes made to the system, which has been operating on version 11 for only a couple of months after an “upgrade” from version 7. Upon checking the Application Event Viewer, it reveals that the Restart Manager initiates and concludes a session at these specific intervals, as indicated by Event ID 10001 and 10000. After running Malwarebytes, it confirms the absence of any malware present on the system, while a CHKDSK scan reports that all files are in a normal state. Read More