The most neglected feature of Windows since it landed in 1995, Task Manager has finally received some love in Windows 8. Here's what's new.
You've likely been using Windows Task Manager to monitor your PC's performance or to kill errant processes since it was first introduced in Windows 95. Sadly, this drab, gray feature has seen no love from Microsoft in the ensuing decades. That's all changed with Windows 8.The Task Manager has been given a refreshing visual update, the data is better organized, and lots of features have been added. This is a guide to making the most of the new Windows 8 Task Manager.
Finding the Task Manager
There are various ways to launch the Task Manager. Windows veterans probably know the Ctrl+Shift+Esc key combination, while the Ctrl+Alt+Del combination in Windows 8 presents a list of options including the Task Manager. You can also access it from the Start screen by typing "Task" or "Task Manager."
Accessing the different areas of Task Manager, as ever, takes place through the tabs: Processes, Performance, App History, Startup, Users, Details, and Services. The following sections describe how to use each.
Processes

Windows 8 Task Manager
Speaking of quantities, they've changed too. By default you see CPU, Memory, Disk activity, and Network activity. Right-clicking on the headings lets you select even more columns. Disk activity and Network activity are important quantities that haven't been displayed in previous versions of Task Manager, though both have a real effect on PC performance.
You can sort the list by name or by any of the quantities I've just mentioned. Additionally, you can group the process list by types: Apps (Metro and Desktop), Background Processes, and Windows Services.
Performance

The CPU chart has an option to display a single chart showing overall activity. Right-clicking breaks it into charts for each logical core on your CPU. You can also see more data below the chart, such as how many threads are running, the CPU model number, how many logical cores, and the current clock speed.
The Memory (RAM) usage section has a chart of memory usage versus time and a bar chart showing the composition of your RAM usage. You can also view details of your page file usage. The disc activity section gives charts for each hard drive on your system. There is information such as the size of the drive, whether it has a page file, and what the current read and write speeds are.
The Wi-Fi and Ethernet sections give you a chart of activity versus time and the vertical axis automatically scales as the peak values change. It also displays which access point you're connected to, which type of connection you're on, your IPv4 and IPv6 addresses, and signal strength.
App history

Startup

For instance, you can sort to find which item has the most impact on startup, or by status to check which programs you've disabled. If you find that an inessential program is taking an inordinate amount of startup time, you can right-click the item to disable its "launch on start" status.
Users

Details

When you right-click on the column headings, there are far more options to choose from. This section allows users to change the priority of processes via the right-click menu. For example, if you're running a CPU-intensive process in the background that's slowing down your other applications, you can reduce its priority so that your foreground apps run more smoothly.
Services

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