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How to use Chromebook Task Manager (Easy Guide)

How to use Chromebook Task Manager

A task manager is often included with operating systems to track and control currently active processes and activities. This is also true with the Google Chrome OS.

It has a simple and straightforward task manager that you can use to check and end any process as well as examine its PID (Process ID), CPU and memory use, network data, and other factors. Explore more to see how we can use this fantastic tool.

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How to use the Chromebook’s Task Manager

Launch the task manager

The keyboard shortcut and the browser settings are the two major ways to start the task manager.

Use the SEARCH + ESC key combination on the keyboard. The SHIFT + Esc combo was available in early iterations of Chrome OS, and it is still functional on certain Chromebooks. 

Others will notify you when they use the Search + Esc keyboard shortcut to launch the task manager.

From the browser, choose Task Manager by clicking on the three icons in the top-right corner.

The Chrome OS task management window ought to be visible.

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Understanding the task manager on a Chromebook

The task manager window will only display these five columns by default:

  • Task
  • Memory traces
  • CPU
  • Network
  • Procedure ID

That is not all, however. By right-clicking anywhere and selecting the item you wish to add, you may add extra columns. Among the additional columns are:

  • Profile
  • Swapped memory
  • Image cache
  • Script cache
  • CSS cache
  • GPU memory
  • SQLite memory
  • NaCl debug report
  • JavaScript memory
  • File descriptors
  • Process priority
  • Keep alive count

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Task Manager: Quit programs and processes (force quit/kill)

The Chrome browser is most likely the first process you will encounter. This process cannot be stopped, and you will even see that the “End Process” option has been disabled.

Click the terminate process button at the bottom of an Android application or process to end it. Keep in mind to use the system procedures with caution. A Chrome tab, Chrome application, or Chrome extension may also be closed.

The ability to access an open tab or extension from here simply by double-tapping or clicking on it is an amazing feature. No doubt. 

By choosing the process or programs you wish to stop while holding down the Shift or Ctrl key, you may kill many processes at once.

And that’s all on how to use the Task manager on Chrome OS. You can now quickly stop any problematic programs and processes on your Chromebook.