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2018-07-10 at 4:24 AM UTClog in as administrator
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2018-07-10 at 4:29 AM UTCalready am.
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2018-07-10 at 4:33 AM UTC
Originally posted by benny vader already am.
You probably need enable "Root User".
https://support.apple.com/en-us/ht204012 -
2018-07-10 at 4:35 AM UTCWhat happened is the morons who wrote the code for the browser didn't write it properly, so that stale memory is not released back to the system, and also redundant and useless caching is used.
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2018-07-10 at 4:46 AM UTC
Originally posted by -SpectraL You probably need enable "Root User".
https://support.apple.com/en-us/ht204012
im using XP. -
2018-07-10 at 5:10 AM UTC
Originally posted by benny vader im using XP.
For WinXP, use Process Explorer by SysInternals. Child PIDs are listed under main PIDs. Look at the memory consumption of each child PID and kill the one that is highest and refresh.
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/sysinternals/downloads/process-explorer#download -
2018-07-10 at 2:44 PM UTC
Originally posted by -SpectraL What happened is the morons who wrote the code for the browser didn't write it properly, so that stale memory is not released back to the system, and also redundant and useless caching is used.
Release channel browsers stopped having significant memory leaks several years ago. -
2018-07-10 at 2:45 PM UTCAlso you're assuming all browsers use a process-per-page model which isn't always true, especially for older browsers.
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2018-07-10 at 4:38 PM UTC
Originally posted by -SpectraL For WinXP, use Process Explorer by SysInternals. Child PIDs are listed under main PIDs. Look at the memory consumption of each child PID and kill the one that is highest and refresh.
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/sysinternals/downloads/process-explorer#downloadDownload
Download Download Process Explorer (1.8 MB)
Run now from Sysinternals Live.
Runs on:
Client: Windows Vista and higher (Including IA64).
Server: Windows Server 2008 and higher (Including IA64).
thanks.
assy hollie. -
2018-07-10 at 4:56 PM UTC
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2018-07-11 at 1:46 AM UTC
Originally posted by Zanick I've upgraded and so far, it hasn't happened. You seem to have hit the target with that suggestion, but I won't know until I've watched it for a few days.
Let us know. There are still other things it can be.
Originally posted by Zanick I've opened the activity monitor although I'm not sure how to interpret all this information. I do see that the CPU column for this site is fluctuating dramatically, however. First 1%, then 30%, now 10%. What should I make of this?
This is normal. Sorting the column by CPU will show whichever processes are currently using the most CPU cycles. So, it's sorting by CPU usage. It will change from moment to moment.
If you receive that error again, open Activity Monitor and see if Safari is indeed using high CPU or a large amount of RAM.
You can also monitor Disk activity as well as network. Try to determine what seems to be power hungry when that error appears.
Of course, we hope that updating MacOS and in turn, Safari, will have cleared all of this up, but there are some other tricks we can try if it doesn't. -
2018-07-11 at 2:17 AM UTCFactory Reset