

DTaskManager does not need any useless confirmation. DTaskManager allows you to select more than one process at a time, and terminate all of them "simultaneously".Ĥ. This is useful, for example, to temporarily suspend a task that uses system resources when you don't want to terminate it (such as a DivX encoding process).ģ. DTaskManager allows you to suspend and reactivate a process (as in Linux). DTaskManager allows you to select more than one process at a, and teate all of them 'simultaneously'. This is useful, for example, to temporarily suspend a task that uses system resources when you don't want to teate it (such as a DivX encoding process). Three different ways to close a process, as the "termination request", the standard "forced termination" with dialogue tolerance, and the "forced termination" of any type of process, bypassing all permissions (it can also terminate running system processes).Ģ. DTaskManager allows you to suspend and reactivate a process (as in Linux). DTaskManager, obviously, is a Task-Manager, but specifically engineered to give additional functionalities that the Windows bundled TaskManager (and other third party products) do not have:ġ.
