![]() ![]() ![]() Microsoft Process Explorer includes a powerful search capability for quickly displaying which processes have particular handles opened or DLLs loaded. If in handle mode, you'll be able to view all handles that the process selected in the top window has opened if Process Explorer is in DLL mode, then you can see the DLLs and memory-mapped files that the process has loaded. The bottom window's data depends on Process Explorer's mode. Its display consists primarily of two sub-windows the top window will show a list of the currently active processes, including all names of their owning accounts. I leave you with a screenshot from Android and hope to hear what you think.Microsoft Process Explorer quickly displays information about which handles and DLL processes have opened or loaded. The user guide PDF offers instructions and screenshots: IOS (iPhone/iPad) and Linux support is in the works and I will update here (message me for notification/invite once ready). ![]() The project is being developed at University of Oslo and is currently in alpha release and I would be happy to hear from anyone who would like to participate in testing or otherwise offer feedback on good/bad aspects of the app and any features you would like to see (just reply to this post or message me privately).Īnyone who want to test the app and offer feedback can either message me their email for an invitation to download the alpha on Android (google play market) or download the Windows release (no install required): I have been developing an open source (GPL) App to access Galaxy histories for easy browsing and checking the status of large jobs (running, queued, etc.) on small screen touch devices (mobiles, tablets, but also works on desktops/laptops). ![]()
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