How to Kill Not Responding Programs Without Task Manager

22:00
Hello and welcome to Char Note. It's frustrating when programs crash. Everybody has clicked on something in an application, just to have the window disregard and see the feared Not Responding content. 

Your first move to execute these solidified projects may be to open the Task Manager, which is flawlessly fine. Notwithstanding, in the event that you'd get a kick out of the chance to do this significantly speedier, you can make an easy route to right away murder any lethargic projects. Here's the secret. 

The Main Method 

To execute off projects without touching the Task Manager, we can use the taskkill charge. Commonly, you would sort this at the charge incite to slaughter a particular procedure. In any case, it's cumbersome to open up the order line each time a program quits reacting, and writing the charge each time is a waste. We can do this better with an alternate way. 

First, right-click space on your desktop and pick New > Shortcut. You'll be approached to enter an area for the alternate way. In that crate, glue the accompanying summon: 

taskkill /f/ fi "status eq not responding" 



This command is simple to understand if you break it down:


  • Taskkill is the command to kill a process, which we want to do when something is frozen.
  • /f tells the command to forcefully kill the task. Without this, Windows just asks the process to terminate, which won’t work if it’s stuck.
  • /fi tells the command to run only on processes that meet the following filter criteria.
  • The text in quotes is our criteria. We want to kill only processes with a status equal to Not Responding.

The shortcut creation box will then ask you to name your new shortcut. Call it anything you like, then press Finish. Now, you’re able to double-click this shortcut at any time, and it will kill any window that’s stuck.

To make this process even faster, we can make a custom keyboard shortcut to run the task killer.

Right-click on your new shortcut and choose Properties. Under the Shortcut tab, click in the Shortcut key box to set a custom keyboard shortcut. Windows will automatically add CTRL + ALT to any letter you press, but you can change it to CTRL + Shift if you like.


Because this shortcut will momentarily launch a command prompt window, you can set Run to Minimized; with that you won’t see a brief flash when you press the shortcut.

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3/2/17 10:15 delete

like mas artikelnya bule bangett:D

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5/2/17 09:07 delete

sangat membantu gan...

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