For example, you could select “My Processes,” to see only a list of processes associated with your user account. Click the tab corresponding to the section you’d like to visit.Īt any time while listing processes, you can select a process from the list, and click the “Stop” button (which looks like an octagon with an “x” inside it) to force it to quit, or click the “Inspect” button (an “i” in a circle) to see more information about the process.Īnd if you’re overwhelmed by the number of processes listed, you can narrow them down using the “View” menu up in the menu bar. Using the five tabs across the top of the window, you can visit displays that show information on running processes sorted by CPU usage (“CPU”), memory usage (“Memory”), energy usage (“Energy”), disk usage (“Disk”), and network usage (“Network”).
Once the “Activity Monitor” window opens, you will see a list of all the processes running on your Mac, similar to this: Discord automatically sets its priority to low when minimized, which causes a lot of issues on worse PCs when under a heavy CPU workload, manually opening task manager to change the priority every time is tiresome. When the “Spotlight Search” bar appears, type “activity monitor,” and hit “Return.” Or you can click the “Activity Monitor.app” icon in the Spotlight results. An option to set up a default priority for the app. To open “Spotlight,” click the small “magnifying glass” icon in your menu bar (or press Command+Space). One of the fastest ways to open Activity Monitor is by using Spotlight.