In the latest update to Windows 11 24H2—patch KB5058411 which rolled out earlier in May—Microsoft made a quiet change to how Task Manager calculates CPU usage in the “Processes” tab, reports Windows Latest.
Previously, the Processes tab used a proprietary method called “Processor Utility” to calculate CPU usage, which often led to the numbers not matching those displayed in the “Performance” and “Users” tabs in Task Manager. This was because the method didn’t take into account the number of CPU cores and could show 100 percent usage even if only one core was fully loaded on a multi-core processor.
With the update, a standardized formula is now used across all tabs, providing more accurate and consistent figures throughout Task Manager. You should now see the same CPU utilization across all tabs, making it easier to monitor and troubleshoot your PC processes.
If you prefer the old calculation method, you can still access it via the “CPU Utility” column. To do that, open the Details tab, right-click a column header, and enable the CPU Utility column.
Further reading: Task Manager pro tips I wish I knew sooner
Connectez-vous pour ajouter un commentaire
Autres messages de ce groupe

Intel documentation has revealed additional code names in the context

In the last few days, AI-generated text-to-video has taken off, with

At this point, I get so many spam calls that my blood pressure rises

One of the stranger effects of the Trump administration’s trade war w

A bit of extra storage space is never a bad thing to have, especially

Looking to skip the hassle of wall-mounting a security camera in your