For future occasions, you might also want to make your Task Manager appear “Always on top” so that it doesn’t end up hidden behind the unresponsive Chrome window. The best way out of this is to press Ctrl + Shift + Escape and use Task Manager to kill the Chrome process (right-click Chrome in Task Manager, then “End task”). In these situations you can’t even click the cross to close Chrome or Alt + F4 your way out of it. Sometimes something on a web page – an advert, video or bad piece of coding – can cause Chrome to seize up and the window to become unresponsive. Note: w e’re assuming here that you’ve done the basic things like tested your Internet connection with other browsers and reset your router before coming here.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |