Google
is
rolling
out
some
new
Chrome
memory
management
features
aimed
at
helping
you
wrangle
out-of-control
tabs
more
easily.
The
updates
include
new
“Performance
issue
alerts”
and
some
tweaks
to
the
existing
Memory
Saver
mode,
which
already
tries
to
free
up
the
resources
of
inactive
tabs
in
the
background.
The
new
alerts
appear
when
a
new
Performance
Detection
tool
finds
that
one
of
your
tabs
is
using
more
resources
than
it
should.
The
notification
appears
next
to
your
account
thumbnail
in
Chrome’s
toolbar
as
a
tiny
graphic
that
looks
like
a
speedometer.
(If
I
didn’t
know
about
it
already,
I
might
think
I’d
accidentally
added
an
Ookla
Speedtest
extension
to
my
browser.)
If
you
click
the
graphic,
it
will
list
the
offending
tabs
and
give
you
the
option
to
“Dismiss”
or
“Fix
now.”
Here’s
what
it
looks
like:
Google
also
updated
Memory
Saver,
a
feature
that
the
company
introduced
to
Chrome
in
2022
that
snoozes
tabs
when
they’re
hogging
your
computer’s
resources.
Google
spokesperson
Scott
Westover
has
confirmed
to
The
Verge
via
email
that
the
modes
are
named
“Moderate,”
“Balanced,”
and
“Maximum,”
as
in
the
screenshot
at
the
bottom
of
this
article.
(As
of
this
writing,
Google’s
blog
lists
the
names
incorrectly;
Westover
said
this
will
be
corrected
later
today.)
According
to
Google,
Moderate
interprets
your
system’s
needs
and
manages
tabs
for
you,
Balanced
operates
based
on
system
needs
and
your
browsing
habits,
and
Maximum
will
deactivate
tabs
the
fastest
after
you
stop
using
them.
To
check
out
the
new
settings,
simply
click
the
three-dot
menu
in
the
upper-right
corner
of
Chrome,
click
Settings,
and
click
the
“Performance”
tab
on
the
left.
You
should
see
a
new
“Performance
issue
alerts”
toggle
under
General
and
updated
Memory
Saver
options
in
Memory
below
that.
Here
are
our
screenshots,
if
you
want
to
see
what
the
Performance
issue
alert
toggle
looks
like.
Screenshot:
Chrome
settings
Update,
October
29th:
Updated
with
Google
spokesperson
Scott
Westover’s
confirmation
of
the
Memory
Saver
mode
names.
(Originally posted by Wes Davis)
Comments