How to disable CrossDeviceResume.exe?

Yeah, I use PL Pro on my main system, as I have to (which is why I bought it), lol. Having an X3D CPU, it's a 'must', to be able to set the cores as I wish, but once set for each instance, I have it close, which leaves only 2 processes running, (Engine & Agent), very light, but great for 'killing' anything nasty also ;)
Similar situation, I have a a 13900K, so I had to get PL to avoid using E-Cores in games as setting affinity by hand was PITA. They released free CoreDirector later, for that purpose. I got the 5 PC license so I use it on all my PCs to control unwated processes.

PL's resource usage is minimal indeed, but I guess when you're trying to squeeze out every bit of performance then everything counts.

I hope to eventually dig into NT lite, I havent used it yet
You can reduce resource usage on older hardware by doing a custom build with NTLite. You can get good results with post-install utilities too, but nothing goes as deep and gives you as much control as NTLIte.

However, don't expect miracles. I've just moved my old Dell Latitude 5285 2-in-1 back to Windows 10, because even the most stripped down Windows 11 build was too laggy on it. I did a custom Windows 10 built with NTLite, of course, and damn, it flies compared to Windows 11, responsivness is on par with Linux. What a shame, it must be the UI in Windows 11 that drags it down so much. Anyway, I digress...

To be honest though, the main reason I use NTLIte is to remove things that I find intrusive or that simply annoy me.
 
I've just moved my old Dell Latitude 5285 2-in-1 back to Windows 10, I did a custom Windows 10 built with NTLite, of course, and damn, it flies compared to Windows 11,
This thinkpad x270(intel 6th gen) came with w10 pro 17763 316(?) but has official factory support for w7 and 8.1.
Its currently running 8.1EOL online and offline(tweaked to hell) partitions. Old hardware rocks :D
 
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