Not a busy day, going to try Chrome for a day
-
Seeing they just release version 6, I thought I'll take it for a spin. So far, it feels a lot faster than FF 3.6.
xacc.ide
IronScheme - 1.0 RC 1 - out now!
((λ (x) `(,x ',x)) '(λ (x) `(,x ',x))) The Scheme Programming Language – Fourth Edition -
leppie wrote:
So far, it feels a lot faster than FF 3.6.
Is the speed really that significant? Given the speed of modern processors vs the speed of modern networks, does it make a difference? I've just posted a reply to DD's message about his network problems, and the CP web server took best part of 15 seconds to accept it. It always seems to me that when dealing with internet-based web servers, network speed and latency, and web server performance, are the limiting factors, not rendering speed. For a corprorate intranet, with a litte-used web server on a 10GB backbone, I can see it might make a difference. As an aside (and this isn't "browser bashing", just my view as a software developer), this page makes me chuckle: http://www.google.com/chrome/intl/en-GB/more/features.html[^] It says: "Chrome is built for stability. If an individual tab freezes or crashes, the other tabs are unaffected." Err, no. If it was really built for stability, it wouldn't crash or freeze in the first place.
-
Seeing they just release version 6, I thought I'll take it for a spin. So far, it feels a lot faster than FF 3.6.
xacc.ide
IronScheme - 1.0 RC 1 - out now!
((λ (x) `(,x ',x)) '(λ (x) `(,x ',x))) The Scheme Programming Language – Fourth Editionleppie wrote:
So far, it feels a lot faster than FF 3.6.
I have ditched FF and never looked back again. Even the latest Opera seems much faster than FF :( Primary Browsers as of lately in descending orders Chrome Opera IE FF
Yusuf May I help you?
-
leppie wrote:
So far, it feels a lot faster than FF 3.6.
Is the speed really that significant? Given the speed of modern processors vs the speed of modern networks, does it make a difference? I've just posted a reply to DD's message about his network problems, and the CP web server took best part of 15 seconds to accept it. It always seems to me that when dealing with internet-based web servers, network speed and latency, and web server performance, are the limiting factors, not rendering speed. For a corprorate intranet, with a litte-used web server on a 10GB backbone, I can see it might make a difference. As an aside (and this isn't "browser bashing", just my view as a software developer), this page makes me chuckle: http://www.google.com/chrome/intl/en-GB/more/features.html[^] It says: "Chrome is built for stability. If an individual tab freezes or crashes, the other tabs are unaffected." Err, no. If it was really built for stability, it wouldn't crash or freeze in the first place.
Electron Shepherd wrote:
It says: "Chrome is built for stability. If an individual tab freezes or crashes, the other tabs are unaffected."
` Wasn't there always the option to start IE windows as a separate process? I'm pretty sure there was, and I know I enabled it from the first moment that I was aware of it.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
-
leppie wrote:
So far, it feels a lot faster than FF 3.6.
Is the speed really that significant? Given the speed of modern processors vs the speed of modern networks, does it make a difference? I've just posted a reply to DD's message about his network problems, and the CP web server took best part of 15 seconds to accept it. It always seems to me that when dealing with internet-based web servers, network speed and latency, and web server performance, are the limiting factors, not rendering speed. For a corprorate intranet, with a litte-used web server on a 10GB backbone, I can see it might make a difference. As an aside (and this isn't "browser bashing", just my view as a software developer), this page makes me chuckle: http://www.google.com/chrome/intl/en-GB/more/features.html[^] It says: "Chrome is built for stability. If an individual tab freezes or crashes, the other tabs are unaffected." Err, no. If it was really built for stability, it wouldn't crash or freeze in the first place.
Electron Shepherd wrote:
Err, no. If it was really built for stability, it wouldn't crash or freeze in the first place.
It's not always the browser's fault for crashing. Any plugin (i.e. Flash) might be the reason.
We are using Linux daily to UP our productivity - so UP yours!
-
Electron Shepherd wrote:
It says: "Chrome is built for stability. If an individual tab freezes or crashes, the other tabs are unaffected."
` Wasn't there always the option to start IE windows as a separate process? I'm pretty sure there was, and I know I enabled it from the first moment that I was aware of it.
I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!
No idea. As I said, I'm not "browser bashing", or saying one is better than another.
-
leppie wrote:
So far, it feels a lot faster than FF 3.6.
Is the speed really that significant? Given the speed of modern processors vs the speed of modern networks, does it make a difference? I've just posted a reply to DD's message about his network problems, and the CP web server took best part of 15 seconds to accept it. It always seems to me that when dealing with internet-based web servers, network speed and latency, and web server performance, are the limiting factors, not rendering speed. For a corprorate intranet, with a litte-used web server on a 10GB backbone, I can see it might make a difference. As an aside (and this isn't "browser bashing", just my view as a software developer), this page makes me chuckle: http://www.google.com/chrome/intl/en-GB/more/features.html[^] It says: "Chrome is built for stability. If an individual tab freezes or crashes, the other tabs are unaffected." Err, no. If it was really built for stability, it wouldn't crash or freeze in the first place.
-
Seeing they just release version 6, I thought I'll take it for a spin. So far, it feels a lot faster than FF 3.6.
xacc.ide
IronScheme - 1.0 RC 1 - out now!
((λ (x) `(,x ',x)) '(λ (x) `(,x ',x))) The Scheme Programming Language – Fourth EditionChrome is really very fast, at least for the Google sites... I liked the new UI of FF4, but seems it's not as fast as Chrome... :(
Don't forget to Click on [Vote] and [Good Answer] on the posts that helped you.
Regards - Kunal Chowdhury | Software Developer | Chennai | India | My Blog | My Tweets | Silverlight Tutorial
-
Chrome is really very fast, at least for the Google sites... I liked the new UI of FF4, but seems it's not as fast as Chrome... :(
Don't forget to Click on [Vote] and [Good Answer] on the posts that helped you.
Regards - Kunal Chowdhury | Software Developer | Chennai | India | My Blog | My Tweets | Silverlight Tutorial
KunalChowdhury wrote:
I liked the new UI of FF4
I couldn't stand all those taskbar 'windows'...
xacc.ide
IronScheme - 1.0 RC 1 - out now!
((λ (x) `(,x ',x)) '(λ (x) `(,x ',x))) The Scheme Programming Language – Fourth Edition -
Seeing they just release version 6, I thought I'll take it for a spin. So far, it feels a lot faster than FF 3.6.
xacc.ide
IronScheme - 1.0 RC 1 - out now!
((λ (x) `(,x ',x)) '(λ (x) `(,x ',x))) The Scheme Programming Language – Fourth EditionVersion 6 and still no rss reader?
Giorgi Dalakishvili #region signature My Articles Browsing xkcd in a windows 7 way[^] #endregion