

We included some photos for you below, and don’t suggest tweaking to get it for yourself. There are some steps you can take to try and get it to work. Of course, though, since the new Task Manager app is hidden, it’s not fully functional in its current hidden state. Microsoft even has thought about Dark Mode, and there’s a settings menu that lets you toggle between it and the light mode. There are also previews of CPU, GPU, Memory, Disk, and Network usage along the top. It sports on the WinUI design components, has Mica effects, and a sidebar instead of the classic tabbed interface. This is according to a series of tweets from on Twitter (apparently via Gustave Monce,) who recently discovered a new version of the classic Windows tool hidden away in the latest Windows Insider Dev Channel release.Īs you’d expect, this new Task Manager is heavily based on Windows 11’s design elements. The Services tab has been prettied up and now includes an option to quickly restart services.There’s new evidence suggesting that Microsoft could finally be working on an updated Task Manager app in Windows 11. (CPU affinity determines which CPU a process runs on, if your system has multiple CPUs or a CPU with multiple cores.) It exposes exposes advanced options not found on other tabs, including process priority and CPU affinity. It doesn’t have a pretty interface - although application icons have been added. The Details tab is the evolution of the old Processes tab on previous versions of Windows.

You can expand a user’s name to view that user’s processes. The Users tab breaks down your system’s resource usage by user account. Alpine Linux 3.18.2 Alpine Linux is an independent, general-purpose Linux distribution designed for power users who appreciate security, simplicity, and resource efficiency. Windows also measures just how long each application is delaying your startup, so you can make informed decisions. DTaskManager is specifically engineered to give additional functionality that the Windows bundled Task Manager (and other third-party products) do not have. Windows finally has a way to easily disable startup programs. The Startup tab shows the applications that automatically start with your computer. The “App history” tab shows how much CPU time and network bandwidth each Metro app has used, so you can identify the resource hogs. The Processes tab only shows each process’s current resource usage.
