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10:59:00 PM
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It’s frustrating when your computer slows down. Oftentimes this
happens when a program utilizes too many resources, like memory or the
CPU.
But increasingly, web browsers like Internet Explorer, Safari,
Firefox and Chrome are to blame. Determining what resources your browser
is using can help you eliminate the resource hogs and return your
computer to the performance you once had.
Why Do Certain Browsers Run Slow?
Web browsers can display many pages in separate tabs. And web pages have increased in complexity to run powerful sites such as Gmail
or YouTube. Most browsers also support “extensions” or “plugins” that
add features like password management, ad blocking and social network
notifications.
Increasing the load even more, each tab and every extension uses its
own portion of computer memory, often called a “sandbox.” This prevents
malware on a web page from accessing other resources in your browser.
And if one process crashes, it’s less likely to affect the others.
Finding the Culprits
If your computer is running slowly, first check if the web browser is using more memory or CPU than it should.
In Windows, access the Task Manager by holding down the CTRL and
SHIFT keys, and then press the ESC key. In the popup window that
appears, click the “Processes” tab. On a Mac, open the Applications
folder and then the Utilities folder and click on the Activity Monitor
program.
Task Manager and Activity Monitor show running processes, called
“Image Name” in Windows and “Process Name” on a Mac. Next to each is the
percentage of the total CPU and memory resources it is consuming. Click
the header of a column, say, “Memory,” to sort by that info and find
the biggest users. You’ll probably see multiple entries — one for each
open tab or running extension.
A single web page with video may use 20-30% of your CPU. A few of
those, or any one more than 50%, will clearly affect performance. If the
memory used by all of your browser processes combined exceeds one-half
of your computer’s memory, your browser is likely affecting performance,
too.
Often the easiest fix is to simply close the browser window or tab
and reopen it again. If the problem continues to occur, you’ll need to
determine if a particular page or extension is causing the problem.
Digging Deeper Into Your Browser
The list of processes shows if your browser is consuming too many
resources, but it won’t show which web page or extension is guilty.
Unfortunately, Internet Explorer and Safari don’t show this information,
but Google Chrome and Mozilla Firefox do.
Chrome
Chrome
provides the most detail. On a Mac or PC, click the wrench icon in the
upper right of your toolbar, select “Tools” and choose “Task Manager” to
get a list of processes. For example, a tab containing the
TechNewsDaily home page would appear as “Tab: Home|TechNewsDaily.com,”
or the AdBlock extension would show up as “Extension: AdBlock.” This can
make it far easier to pinpoint the problem.
Firefox
In Firefox on a Mac or PC, type “about:memory” in the address bar and
press Enter. You’ll see the amount of memory processes are using,
though not the CPU usage. The information is more detailed than you’ll
need but can still be useful in tracking down a memory-hogging extension
or web page.
What to Do
As recommended above, closing your browser and reopening it is often
the easiest fix. If the browser is frozen, the Windows Task Manager and
Mac Activity Monitor allow you to “end” or “quit” a process. This could
cause instability, so it’s good to follow up by closing and reopening
the whole browser app.
If you’ve narrowed down the problem to an extension, disable or
uninstall it and look for a different one that does the job. If a
specific website causes the problem, try a different browser and see if
it handles the site better.
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