Microsoft’s latest brainwave for Edge is one we hope Chrome copies – a RAM limiter to stop the browser eating up your memory

New ‘resource controls’ option allows you to restrict Edge’s RAM usage

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Everyone’s familiar with the paranoia around having aweb browseractive, and how much RAM it might eat – particularly with lots of tabs running – butMicrosofthas had a bright idea to help ease those fears with itsEdge browser.

A new section on the Settings page could let you control how much RAM Edge can use, you can also choose whether this control is activated only when you are playing a game or always:https://t.co/YiCu5igL0U pic.twitter.com/pE29PI6FfRMarch 27, 2024

As regular leaker on X (formerly Twitter) Leopeva64 discovered, in the earliest test version of Edge (Canary), Microsoft has introduced a feature that allows users to specify how much RAM the web browser can use.

Known as ‘Resource controls’ this means that if you have, say, 8GB of RAM on your laptop, and you don’t ever want Edge using more than half of that, you could set a limit of 4GB.

There’s a toggle to turn this feature on or off, and a slider that allows you to easily select the amount of RAM that is available to Edge (from 1GB through to all your RAM).

Microsoft has implemented a couple of further options here, too, so you can specify whether this limit is active all the time, or if you only want theRAMrestriction enforced when you’re playing a game (and need the memory resources more urgently).

RAM risk balancing

RAM risk balancing

This is a nifty idea, but as is usually the case with this kind of performance tweak, there’s a flipside to the equation. Meaning that if you place a strict RAM limit on Edge, you might find the browser slows down a lot, or even starts to run like it’s in molasses if you have lots of Edge windows and tabs open.

Active tabs still need memory (as do sleeping ones, albeit far less) whichever way you dice it, so bear that in mind – if you make it so Edge’s workload exceeds the RAM limit, expect your browsing experience to start becoming very sluggish.

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Still, the ability is definitely a welcome one, and particularly the gaming option – you won’t really be bothering with your browser if you’re playing a game anyway, not most of the time. (Save for the odd brief trip out of the game and back to the desktop to look at walkthroughs or other help sources, perhaps).

As ever with changes in testing, the functionality may not make the cut for the final version of Edge. Indeed, in this case it’s just on a limited (phased) rollout in the earliest test channel, so there’s quite a long road ahead, potentially.

We’re hoping this RAM limiter does make it through to Edge’s stable version, though, and more to the point, thatGooglemight see the wisdom here and be inspired (ahem) to bring a similar take on resource management in withChrome.

ViaThe Verge

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Darren is a freelancer writing news and features for TechRadar (and occasionally T3) across a broad range of computing topics including CPUs, GPUs, various other hardware, VPNs, antivirus and more. He has written about tech for the best part of three decades, and writes books in his spare time (his debut novel - ‘I Know What You Did Last Supper’ - was published by Hachette UK in 2013).

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