Context menu is unsuitable. Task manager should be a die-hard thing. In
Windows ctrl-alt-del either runs taskmanager or unconditionally pops up
dialog allowing to run task manager. Therefore, it IS die-hard here.
Ctrl-alt-del is very diehard shortcut in Windows, virtually no prog's
can override it and it unconditionally brings task manager or special
system dialog.

Ubuntu is another story. Once some app has encountered problem and gone
mad, you may have trouble launching task manager.

Context menu? Menu of what? Task panel? What if problematic program
managed to put itself over task panel? And what if someone does not want
to see task panel over other apps at all? In Windows this is secondary
method to run task manager. If this will be here secondary method, I see
no prob's. But primary method should be something else.

Let's repeat: there should be easy and die-hard way to run task manager
(ideally, this probably should be customizable and die-hard keyboard
shortcut). Task manager should not assume that problematic tasks are
friendly, so it have to put itself sticky over all windows, it should
boost own priority over other prog's, etc. All this just to avoid
scenario when failed or misbehaving program overrides task manager
appearance. Normally, nobody starts task manager just for fun. It's
rather started as emergency thing to deal with hanged or resource hog
programs and in similar scenarios. Surely, skilled users can switch to
console and this IS quite diehard. But "average Joe" will have hard
times here.

-- 
Ubuntu: there is no easy and evident way to run task manager.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/234884
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