Jump back into Chrome and hit shift-esc, that will tell you what each process is. In Chrome, every tab, extension and plugin have their own process. It's like that so if, for whatever reason, any one of those crashes, it doesn't affect anything else.
Using shift-esc you can also see which element of Chrome is slowing you down, thus you can avoid it in the future. On Oct 24, 10:52 pm, Ray Lindsey <[email protected]> wrote: > Within a few days of working Chrome, I've noticed that it starts to > use over 16 processes. This initially SLOWED DOWN Chrome. Now if I'm > even working chrome, it takes a minute or two to load individually > pages that are tabbed. Sorry to say that I have to switch back to > Firefox. I gave it a try, but if Chrome uses over 1-4 processes in > Windows Task Manager and slows down my entire computer, then I cannot > use it anymore. Your claims of Google Chrome loading rather fast and > loading pages lightening fast are fake. --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ Chromium Discussion mailing list: [email protected] View archives, change email options, or unsubscribe: http://groups.google.com/group/chromium-discuss -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---
