Very strange. I just looked at taskmanager and it does show a line for each tab open in seamonkey, but the only line with any data is the top line (seamonkey). I guess this must be the total for all tabs. All the lines for the tabs are blank, but it does show each tab's title, unlike your example.
Maybe each browser shows differently in taskman?
I played around a bit with Task Manager on my laptop, and it looks like if you go under View - Group by type, it will break down the app's usage like it did on my first post. From there, you can look at all the various processes that each app (like browsers) are using.I'm also running win 10 Pro. It's a mystery.
I also tried running edge, and taskman shows populated data for all the lines & tabs plus several more lines. Like your first example, none of the lines show the tab titles, so you don't know which is which.
I also have chrome, but I figured it probably would be same as edge, since the latter is basically chrome, but dorked up by microsoft
Thanks, this identifies the individual tabs! Though the memory usage doesn't jive with what I'm seeing in Windows Task Manager's usage for each Firefox.exe instance or Firefox overall usage. Seems like there is much more memory being consumed according to Windows Task Manager than shown by the Firefox Task Manager. But the "Energy Impact" (I guess a proxy for CPU utilization) reported for each tab seems more consistent, which is what I was more interested in.Firefox has a built in task manager that may help.
Task Manager - see whether tabs or extensions are slowing down Firefox | Firefox Help
Firefox has a feature that lets you see how much memory and CPU resources are being used by tabs, extensions and other processes. Learn more.support.mozilla.org
I can confirm the difference that you're seeing between the two task managers.Thanks, this identifies the individual tabs! Though the memory usage doesn't jive with what I'm seeing in Windows Task Manager's usage for individual Firefox.exe instances. Seems like there is much more memory being consumed per Windows Task Manager than shown by the Firefox Task Manager. But the "Energy Impact" (I guess a proxy for CPU utilization) reported for each tab seems consistent, which is what I was more interested in.
I have 16GB RAM and it seems when total memory utilization gets to around 7GB or higher, everything seems bogged down and slower. 10GB and it really shows.I am using 6 GB of ram with just my browser. Not that it matters.
I have 16GB RAM and it seems when total memory utilization gets to around 7GB or higher, everything seems bogged down and slower. 10GB and it really shows.