1) If you set 'Every [1] week, it will. Every [2] weeks is available if you want it, as is every [12] weeks if you want...
2) It means Recur every [1] week on the day(s) selected.
3) Repeating is for if you wanted it to (for example) Run every [1] week on Wed and Repeat every [1] hour for a Duration of [4] hours. IOW, 'run 4 times (once per hour) on a Wednesday then stop till same time next week'. In your case, strictly ignore it
4) The settings to 'stop after X' are not exposed in our drilldown into the Windows Task Scheduler (note that there is no scheduler in SE/Pro itself - we use a drill-down to the Windows Task Scheduler service). You would need to configure any such setting directly in the Windows Task Scheduler. Note that it will not stop the profile gracefully, it will act like End Process in Task Manager (think 'pull the plug'), you may get incomplete files (partially-copied), and next time it runs it will scan again. You might have more success setting When > Time Limit in the profile itself (it should then stop 'gracefully' - though it will still scan again next run)
5) No idea, sorry - presumably you're editing a Task that was originally configured otherwise, and a copy is still running as stated. A reboot should stop it.
Bear in mind all the settings you can see are duplicates of the settings you get in the Windows Task Scheduler interface. Press F1 with that WTS interface open for Windows Help...
2) It means Recur every [1] week on the day(s) selected.
3) Repeating is for if you wanted it to (for example) Run every [1] week on Wed and Repeat every [1] hour for a Duration of [4] hours. IOW, 'run 4 times (once per hour) on a Wednesday then stop till same time next week'. In your case, strictly ignore it
4) The settings to 'stop after X' are not exposed in our drilldown into the Windows Task Scheduler (note that there is no scheduler in SE/Pro itself - we use a drill-down to the Windows Task Scheduler service). You would need to configure any such setting directly in the Windows Task Scheduler. Note that it will not stop the profile gracefully, it will act like End Process in Task Manager (think 'pull the plug'), you may get incomplete files (partially-copied), and next time it runs it will scan again. You might have more success setting When > Time Limit in the profile itself (it should then stop 'gracefully' - though it will still scan again next run)
5) No idea, sorry - presumably you're editing a Task that was originally configured otherwise, and a copy is still running as stated. A reboot should stop it.
Bear in mind all the settings you can see are duplicates of the settings you get in the Windows Task Scheduler interface. Press F1 with that WTS interface open for Windows Help...