Each browser has its own way to provide information about memory consumption, CPU usage, slow boot of an extension.
1. Mozilla Firefox
Instead of using the information in the memory of the browser Mozilla Firefox extension, you can use a Firefox extension that displays this information for you. It sounds silly when you install another extension to see the current extension is slowing the browser how much, but you can always remove or disable this extension after using it.
To get started, install the extension about: addons-page memory and open the about: addons-memory in a Firefox tab. You will see a list of your installed extensions, sorted by the amount of memory they use. Open this page as many times, you can know add-on (utilities) who are making a memory leak, the add-on does is consume large amounts of memory.
2. Google Chrome
You can use the Task Manager (Task Manager) integration of Chrome to see the memory consumption and even the current CPU usage of the extension is running. Task Manager also displays the resource Chrome web apps you've installed using each browser tabs open and other background processes.
To open Task Manager, click on the Chrome menu button (icon 3 horizontal line segments in the upper right corner)> select Tools> select Task Manager.
Bear in mind that, the extension only runs in the background new listed here, so the extension put code into your page load may not appear in the list, although they can affect page load time .
3. Internet Explorer
Internet Explorer does not disclose the amount of memory being used each add-on. However, it gives you information about each time the browser add-on takes to load. From here, you can infer the memory consumption of the add-on if it takes more time to load, it may consume much more memory as well as things slow down.
To find this information, click on the gear icon in the upper right corner of the window> select Manage Add-ons. You will see the load time of each extension is listed under the column load time. To prevent an add-on loaded with IE, select it in the list and click the Disable button.
4. Use Safe Mode Browser
The determination of the amount of system resources that actually browse a specific extension is used rather difficult problem. The above procedure allows you to retrieve information provided by the browser, but this information does not give a complete picture.
Fortunately, there are ways to see how the browser running without any add-on at all. When you open the browser in Safe Mode (which it will not load any extensions yet), if your browser is significantly faster emergence ie a number of add-on are doing it to slow down.
How to open the browser in Safe Mode:
a. Mozilla Firefox
Click the Firefox button> select Help (Help)> select Restart with Add-ons Disabled (Reboot and disable utility).
b. Google Chrome
Right-click the Google Chrome icon on deskop> select Properties. Add-no-extensions (note, starting with 2 marks -) at the end of the Target box> click OK. Close Chrome and then edit the shortcut used to launch Chrome. To disable Safe Mode, edit the shortcut again and restart Google Chrome.
c. Internet Explorer
On Windows 7, click Start> All Programs> Accessories> System Tools> Internet Explorer (No Add-ons).
On Windows 8, you have to launch the program manually, press the Windows key + R to open the Run dialog box> type in iexplore.exe-extoff> press Enter.
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