Google is about to fix one of the worst things about Chrome on Windows 10 – BGR

  • Google has announced that it will fix one of the worst things about running the Chrome browser on Windows 10, the source reduction.
  • Chrome can use a lot of memory on Windows PCs, which affects overall performance and leads to crashes.
  • Google confirmed that it has found a way to allow users to completely shut down Chrome processes and free up memory when the browser slows everything down.

Google Chrome is the world’s most popular browser, and that’s hardly a surprise. It is fast, contains many useful tricks, and supports many useful extensions that can enhance the Internet surface experience. Chrome is also terribly annoying, to the point where I’ve been trying to ditch it for years. It is a resource pig and can significantly affect battery life on laptops. As I type these words, my MacBook’s fans have sprung into action, a sign that Chrome is consuming way too many resources. These are issues Google promised to fix over and over, with the latest such promises just made earlier this year. While Chrome can be annoying on a variety of operating systems, Google just confirmed that it would fix one of the worst things about running Chrome on Windows 10 computers.

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Chrome can be quite a bit of memory on Windows 10 machines, and that can ruin the whole experience, especially on older machines that don’t have that much RAM to spare. The more tabs you open, the more resources Chrome uses, which can slow down other apps running on the PC. The Chrome issues can lead to crashes, which is also an annoying side effect that can lead to some data loss.

Google explained on its Chromium site (via Tom’s Guide) how it will solve the problem. Google will use a Windows 10 feature called TerminateProcess to enable users to restore memory that Chrome has used much faster and cleaner than before:

Leaving a process clean is difficult and expensive. Avoiding racing conditions becomes nearly impossible with complex software, and a clean exit can be quite slow. Waiting for all threads, paging in code and data, and racing conditions don’t make it worth it.

We have gradually moved to using TerminateProcess for more process types. While the majority of the shutdown processes followed by this bug are in utility processes, this change uses TerminateProcess for all process types. We shouldn’t be running destructors, so it should be safe never to use exit () (or to have it opt-in).

Closing tabs or the entire browser when the system crashes may not immediately free up RAM at this time. But the Chrome fix that Google announced can prevent that kind of behavior and reduce crashes. TerminateProcess is a Windows function that tells a program to terminate all processes and threads and free up those resources immediately.

However, it is unclear when the solution will be rolled out. Google hasn’t offered a timeline, but it will hopefully be sooner rather than later. Once implemented, the fix should improve overall Windows 10 performance by allowing users to better manage resources. Until that happens, it’s a good idea to limit the number of open tabs and restart the PC when it crashes. A RAM upgrade is also something that can fix Chrome crashes.

Chris Smith started writing about gadgets as a hobby and before he knew it, he shared his thoughts on tech matters with readers around the world. If he doesn’t write about gadgets, he sadly fails to stay away from them, although he desperately tries. But that’s not necessarily a bad thing.

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