Google Chrome bogging down? Try these tips to speed it up – The Arizona Republic

Posted: May 11, 2022 at 12:04 pm

Ken Colburn| Special for The Republic

QUESTION: I love Google Chrome, but it seems like its bogging down a lot lately. Any suggestions?

ANSWER: No matter which browser youre using, over time things can bog down especially if you like to have lots of websites open at the same time.

There was a time when you could only have one active session running in a browser and the use of the Back button was how you switched to something that you previously opened.

That all changed with the adoption of tabbed browsing back in the early 2000s, which allowed for additional web pages without closing the current one.

This incredibly useful feature has led to what many are calling a tab hoarding problem that can lead to numerous issues, including sluggish browser performance.

Getting junk text messages?: Here's how you can stop receiving so many of them

Each browser session you open via a new tab takes additional working memory (RAM) which taken to the extreme can deplete this precious resource for everything on your computer.

Many web pages have active sections of video as content or as an advertisement, which can lead to an even greater amount of memory being sucked up for something you arent currently viewing.

If you see a lot of tabs open when things get slow, try closing as many as possible to see if thats contributing to the slowdown.

This is why you have so many browser tabs open

Whether on our personal or work computer, we all may be guilty of this one bad habit. Having way too many browser tabs open at once, to the point that it can become overwhelming. Susana Victoria Perez has more.

Buzz60

Chrome has a Task Manager tool that will allow you to see how much memory each open tab is using and close them if they are memory hogs.

You can open the Task Manager by using the keyboard shortcut of Shift+Esc or click on the three dots in the upper right corner of Chrome, then on More tools, then on Task Manager.

To see the tabs that are using the most memory, click on the Memory footprint heading until you see a black down arrow, which indicates memory usage in descending order.

Look for anything that starts with Tab: to start your evaluation of the memory hogs so youll know which ones to avoid keeping open in the background.

Getting tired of political ads?: Here's how to manage your Facebook settings

Google includes a basic tool for removing harmful or rogue software that may have snuck into your browser.

To open the tool, click on the three dots in the upper right corner of your browser window, then on Settings and then on the Advanced tab.

Look for the Reset and clean up option to get to the Clean up computer function.

A great reason for choosing Chrome as your browser is the plethora of add-on tools better known as extensions that can dramatically improve functionality.

But, just as with tabs, too many can add unnecessary overhead to Chrome that can contribute to slower performance issues.

Extensions are often like smartphone apps that seem to be something youll use often but turn out to only get used when you first install them.

Look for an icon that looks like a puzzle piece in the upper right corner of Chrome to access the Manage extensions option which will allow you to disable or remove the ones that you dont use regularly.

If these tips didnt help, try alternative browsers such as Firefox, Opera, Brave, Safari (macOS) or Edge (Windows).

Ken Colburn is founder and CEO of Data Doctors Computer Services, datadoctors.com. Ask any tech question at facebook.com/DataDoctors or on Twitter @TheDataDoc.

See the original post here:

Google Chrome bogging down? Try these tips to speed it up - The Arizona Republic

Related Posts