



Keyboard Standard Mouse Microsoft wireless optical mouse PSU Antec TruePower 2.0 Case Cooler Master Centurion Cooling Too many fans Hard Drives OCZ SSD Vertex Plus 60GB SATA (Firmware 3.55), 64MB cache Hitachi HD321KJ SATA, 320GB, 7200rpm, 16MB cache Internet Speed AT&T U-verse (18mbit/sec) Antivirus Microsoft Security Essentials Browser Firefox Other Info Other devices: Compaq CQ-60 laptop Google Nexus 7 (2012) tablet Nvidia SHIELD tablet (US/LTE) Hardkernel ODROID-XU single-board computer (Samsung Exynos 5420). Get-Process Where Name Like chrome Stop-Process. If you have already migrated to the Command Prompt’s older brother PowerShell, it is much simpler. The tasklist command in Windows is the Linux ps command equivalent. Once you have the name of the process a simple tskill is all it takes: tskill chrome. All processes in Windows can be listed on the command-line prompt (CMD) using the tasklist command. Same problem with taskkill: I had to replace it whith pskill. The easiest way to get these is on the Details tab of the Task Manager. I couldn't find any reason or solution but use 'pslist /accepteula' of sysinternal instead of it. Called from the same program started as a normal process (not as service), it did run. Tasklist returned with the (undocumented) code 128. I had following problem on Windows 2003 SP2: Tasklist didn't return any output on stdout or stderr, when called from a process started as Windows service (even under Local Account). Processes using command prompt in Windows. If your Task Manager gets stuck or unresponsive due to intensive apps and you are not able to kill the particular process.
