Plus, the “Click sends” menu options let you change the BSD signal that you send to your running applications via a mouse and via a keyboard shortcut. From Preferences you can also display all process, only your processes, or only your windowed processes. This makes it easy to find and kill those CPU or memory hungry apps that may be slowing down your Mac. However, scrolling over the Preferences menu option will show even more sort options.įor instance, you can sort by CPU usage or Memory usage. By default, your running application list is sorted by PID (process identification number) in ascending order. Clicking on a running application will immediately kill it (without a verification message), so be sure that you indeed want to quit the application before clicking.Ĥ. Click on it to display all of your running applications and simply click on the application that you want to kill. Once you run AppKiller, you will see its icon in your menu bar. You will need to unzip the downloaded folder and drag AppKiller.ap to your Applications folder.ģ. You will see it linked within the text, towards the bottom.Ģ. Here’s how to kill running applications form the menu bar with AppKiller.ġ. It’s a simple Mac app that lives in the menu bar and lets you kill running applications in one click. ![]() ![]() ![]() If you’re looking for a really quick way to kill running applications, meet AppKiller.
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