Windows 11 Task Manager Glitch Leads to Infinite Copies of the App.
If you've recently updated your Windows 11 system to the October update, a curious bug may have affected you. When trying to close the Task Manager app itself, users have encountered an unusual situation: instead of shutting down the task manager window, closing it inadvertently opens multiple copies of the application. This results in each instance consuming around 20MB of system RAM.
Each subsequent copy of the task manager process can take up even more RAM and can lead to a substantial impact on performance and battery life, especially if users frequently open Task Manager or let too much time pass between reboots.
This issue only affects Windows 11 systems using the October update for Windows 11 24H2 and 25H2 (KB5067036). Users have manually initiated this preview update, and Microsoft has not yet acknowledged it as a known bug.
If you've recently updated your Windows 11 system to the October update, a curious bug may have affected you. When trying to close the Task Manager app itself, users have encountered an unusual situation: instead of shutting down the task manager window, closing it inadvertently opens multiple copies of the application. This results in each instance consuming around 20MB of system RAM.
Each subsequent copy of the task manager process can take up even more RAM and can lead to a substantial impact on performance and battery life, especially if users frequently open Task Manager or let too much time pass between reboots.
This issue only affects Windows 11 systems using the October update for Windows 11 24H2 and 25H2 (KB5067036). Users have manually initiated this preview update, and Microsoft has not yet acknowledged it as a known bug.