Today, I've had a 3rd customer in the last 2 weeks call and tell me Microsoft Solitaire collections is locking up their computer up.
The first one would freeze up 1 to 30 mins. I tried everything. DISM, SFC, resetting Solitaire reinstalling it. Nothing worked, finally, I ended up just clean installing windows ... good so far. I also added 2GB of ram to her machine. Bringing her from 4 to 6.
The second report I got, Also said it would lock up their computer. This time I watched it load in the task manager and upon launching it would use around 3GB \ on a 3.7 GB usable machine. After uninstalling and reinstalling, it's now using a normal amount of ram. She's still testing out to see if fixed the issue.
I just connected to the 3rd person and once again Solitaire is once again using a crazy amount of ram.
All 3 customers had 4GB of ram in their machines at the time of the issue
It appears the game is going nuts and creating thousands of files. I thought log files were the issue as there were 42,000 of them in the log directory dating back to 2016 but I renamed the log directory and relaunched the game and it continued to use a HUGE amount of ram.
Then I uninstalled and reinstalled Solitaire and now it's using a respectable 201.7 megs of ram instead of 2.7GB.
Has anyone else had any reports of this? I'm wondering why the reinstall of solitaire didn't fix it the for the first person. Her old hard drive still has her old install on it. Clean installed onto an spare 64GB SSD for testing. Going to boot her old install up Monday and take a look at the ram it's using.
If I could, I would commemorate it the best way possible: Replacing old machines that are still running Windows XP with something more modern, stable and better.
Noone and nothing should be running Windows XP in 2026.
Google's new hand-wave reCAPTCHA can be bypassed with a stock photo by Ivan Jenic
Image: Screenshot
Google is testing a new reCAPTCHA method that asks you to wave at your camera to prove you're human. So, besides solving puzzles and reading distorted text, you can now use your computer’s camera to pass the verification test.
When the hand gesture verification is triggered, your browser asks for camera access and prompts you to perform a simple gesture, like a wave or an open palm. Google says it records a short video of the movement and uses AI to extract 21 hand-knuckle coordinates to complete the verification process. The video is then immediately deleted, and Google swears it doesn't keep it.
The process alone can be uncomfortable for people who wouldn’t want their biometric data, which hand scans technically qualify as, recorded. But it gets even more nuanced, as early testers discovered that the new hand-waving reCAPTCHA can be passed with a simple stock image.
A user on X tested the new challenge using a stock image of a hand fed through OBS Virtual Camera, and it passed. I wanted to verify it, so I tried the same thing. It took me a few tries and a few stock images, but in the end, I was also able to pass the test. I simply had to readjust the stock image of a generic person waving inside OBS, and Google’s mechanism registered it as a legitimate hand gesture.
Once again, it didn’t even have to be a video or an AI-generated hand animation. Given the simplicity of the process, the entire action can be automated in minutes. All it takes is a simple Python script to render the new reCAPTCHA method obsolete. And it doesn’t even have to be an AI bot, which is usually used for solving puzzles and other verification methods.
The new reCAPTCHA method is still in its early phase, and Google will, hopefully, update its AI to at least reject still images. However, this incident, combined with users’ initial skepticism about Google’s practices regarding user data, likely won’t make too many people wave at the camera anytime soon.
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 "to fund healthcare and tuition" 🤣🤣🤣🤣 Who do you think you are talking about, some COMMUNIST? We are better than them, doG bless Murica!!!
p.s. I'm from a country where government does exactly that, i.e. not form US.
Question
+Warwagon MVC
Today, I've had a 3rd customer in the last 2 weeks call and tell me Microsoft Solitaire collections is locking up their computer up.
The first one would freeze up 1 to 30 mins. I tried everything. DISM, SFC, resetting Solitaire reinstalling it. Nothing worked, finally, I ended up just clean installing windows ... good so far. I also added 2GB of ram to her machine. Bringing her from 4 to 6.
The second report I got, Also said it would lock up their computer. This time I watched it load in the task manager and upon launching it would use around 3GB \ on a 3.7 GB usable machine. After uninstalling and reinstalling, it's now using a normal amount of ram. She's still testing out to see if fixed the issue.
I just connected to the 3rd person and once again Solitaire is once again using a crazy amount of ram.
All 3 customers had 4GB of ram in their machines at the time of the issue
It appears the game is going nuts and creating thousands of files. I thought log files were the issue as there were 42,000 of them in the log directory dating back to 2016 but I renamed the log directory and relaunched the game and it continued to use a HUGE amount of ram.
Then I uninstalled and reinstalled Solitaire and now it's using a respectable 201.7 megs of ram instead of 2.7GB.
Has anyone else had any reports of this? I'm wondering why the reinstall of solitaire didn't fix it the for the first person. Her old hard drive still has her old install on it. Clean installed onto an spare 64GB SSD for testing. Going to boot her old install up Monday and take a look at the ram it's using.
Link to comment
https://www.neowin.net/forum/topic/1410581-solitaire-collections-is-using-a-ton-of-ram-and-locking-up-4gb-memory-machines/Share on other sites
10 answers to this question
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now