The first time you open Task Manager in Windows 8 is a completely different interface to Windows 7, the abbreviated information mode, which is equivalent to the Windows 7 Application tab, displays only the programs that are currently running, and if a program is in an unresponsive state, there is a red prompt behind the program, Allows the user to locate the appropriate program at a glance.
Then click on the details and a complete task manager will be rendered.
First of all, in the Process tab, the biggest change is to enumerate the corresponding resources that each process takes up after the program process. The 2nd is that if a process contains more than one process, you can click on the preceding triangle to see the detailed status of the subprocess.
At the same time, right click on the process, there can be further action, here is worth noting two commands:
1. The end of the process. This command is now much faster, and it is no longer waiting for the program's response to turn it off. As a result, the program will be closed more quickly, but if the data is not saved, it will be lost directly without any reminders.
2, Online Search command. When you see what processes are not known in Task Manager, Windows 8 allows you to search for this process by using the online Search command to invoke the default browser's default search engine directly. If you want to change the search engine, you just need to change the browser's default search engine.
By clicking on the Performance tab, Windows 8 now displays the CPU, memory, disk, and Ethernet resource footprint with a more intuitive color icon.
Of course we can still open Resource Monitor by clicking Open Resource Monitor, and there is no big change in Resource Monitor compared to Windows 7.
Application history allows you to view the resource footprint for each application for some data analysis.
and the boot tag can finally let us no longer use the "msconfig" command to bring up the system configuration, you can easily set up to open the startup. Of course, the system at the end will also give a judgment on the impact of the start.
If a program does not need to boot up directly on this program right click Select Disable.
The Details tab is virtually the same as the Windows 7 process label, but more detailed information about each child process is listed.
As for the other tags, it doesn't change much compared to Windows 7, so it's not overly descriptive here.