Item logo image for RAM Terminal Monitor

RAM Terminal Monitor

ExtensionTools
Item media 1 (screenshot) for RAM Terminal Monitor

Overview

Monitor per-tab RAM usage in terminal style

RAM Terminal Monitor – Per-Tab Memory Usage & Resource Inspector ================================================================ Monitor every tab's RAM consumption in real time with a sleek terminal-style interface. RAM Terminal Monitor gives you deep visibility into how Chrome tabs consume memory, scripts, DOM nodes, and network resources — all from a beautifully designed hacker-terminal popup. WHY YOU NEED THIS Chrome is notorious for eating RAM. Tabs silently accumulate, background pages consume resources, and before you know it your system is sluggish. RAM Terminal Monitor helps you identify memory hogs instantly, close resource-draining tabs, and keep your browser lean. KEY FEATURES • Per-Tab RAM Estimates – See estimated memory usage for every open tab, powered by JS heap size and DOM node analysis • Sort by Memory – Tabs are automatically sorted by memory consumption, heaviest first • Color-Coded Warnings – Green (<50MB), yellow (50-150MB), red (150-300MB), and critical pink (300MB+) thresholds • Visual Memory Bars – Mini progress bars show relative memory consumption at a glance • Tab Switching – Jump directly to any tab with one click • One-Click Tab Kill – Close memory-heavy tabs instantly with a confirmation dialog • Detailed Metrics Per Tab: - JS Heap Size - DOM Node Count - Script Count - Network Requests & Transfer Size - Iframe & Media Count - Tab Uptime • Summary Stats Bar – Total tabs with data, aggregate RAM, heaviest tab, total requests, and total scripts • Terminal Aesthetic – Retro CRT-inspired design with ASCII art, green-on-black phosphor glow, and authentic terminal vibes • Keyboard Shortcuts – [ESC] to cancel, [ENTER] to confirm kill in the kill confirmation dialog • Lightweight – Minimal performance overhead; uses Chrome scripting API for on-demand measurement USE CASES • Power users managing dozens of open tabs • Developers debugging memory-heavy web applications • Anyone experiencing system slowdowns from browser RAM usage • Privacy-conscious users who want visibility into resource consumption • Tech enthusiasts who love terminal UIs inside Chrome HOW IT WORKS RAM Terminal Monitor injects a lightweight measurement script into each page to collect JS heap usage, DOM node count, active network requests, and other resource metrics. Data is aggregated and displayed in a sortable list ranked by memory consumption. No data is sent to any server — everything stays local in your browser. PRIVACY & SECURITY • 100% local – no external servers, no data collection, no tracking • Open source – full transparency into how measurements work • Only injects measurement code, never modifies page content • Works on standard web pages only (chrome://, extension pages, about: pages are excluded) PERFECT FOR • Developers & engineers • System administrators • Digital researchers with many tabs • Students working on limited hardware • Anyone who wants to reclaim their browser from RAM bloat Note: RAM Terminal Monitor uses performance.memory and DOM node counts to estimate per-tab memory. Actual memory usage may vary. Not all tabs can be measured (e.g., chrome:// pages, extension pages).

Details

  • Version
    1.1.0
  • Updated
    June 8, 2026
  • Offered by
    AndrewSchoolBoyPP6
  • Size
    34.07KiB
  • Languages
    English
  • Developer
    Email
    andrewschoolboypp6@gmail.com
  • Non-trader
    This developer has not identified itself as a trader. For consumers in the European Union, please note that consumer rights do not apply to contracts between you and this developer.

Privacy

Manage extensions and learn how they're being used in your organization
The developer has disclosed that it will not collect or use your data. To learn more, see the developer’s privacy policy.

This developer declares that your data is

  • Not being sold to third parties, outside of the approved use cases
  • Not being used or transferred for purposes that are unrelated to the item's core functionality
  • Not being used or transferred to determine creditworthiness or for lending purposes
Google apps