RoxxSoft Development Blog
Browsers
Small Firefox 3.6 Non Review
Jan 27th
A couple days ago, after installing Firefox 3.6, i noticed it went from bad to worse on resource usage, at least on my test computer it seems to have gone really bad, why? take a look at this pic:
So what’s wrong here? i just had three open tabs, none of them on heavy flash or java sites, just a couple simple forums and one blog, my test machine is not a top model, but this is not what’s wrong, i have a test PC with a 2.8 Ghz processor, 2 GB of ram and a 500 GB SATA II drive, NVIDIA FX5500 video card with 256MB of video memory, Windows XP SP2, this should be more than enough for web browsing, specially when nothing else is open but Firefox, and yet the computer gets so slow that opening something like Windows Live Mail or Messenger took some minutes, and switching between both Firefox and Mail/Messenger took several seconds, there were drawing issues, eventually Firefox took about 94 % of the CPU, and memory usage went up to 1 GB, crashing the computer, i was not able to save a screen shot or do anything but to reset the machine, the thing is, i had an older Firefox version installed on this same hardware with no issues at all, well, not like these at least, and i had Chrome and other software like Visual Studio which still works at top speed, by this i mean, it works very well on this hardware, is usable, given that Firefox is not running of course..
Yesterday i went on the net and noticed a couple of very nice reviews:
Here’s one at ArsTechnica
And another one at TechRadar
I’ll quote from the last link (emphasis mine):
There’s a brand new Firefox in town: Firefox 3.6. It’s not a huge update, but it does offer improved performance and stability
I guess we all do live in different worlds, could it be maybe that what we have here is a classical example of developers forgetting about all of those who do not have/can’t afford top of the line hardware? and that they are developing this software on their high end computers, where they can’t see the end result as seen by people with old hardware, really, who cares about them, let them buy new modern hardware for once right? have we fallen into the ‘hardware is cheap/fast so don’t waste time optimizing and writing small/fast code” trap?
I’m a little saddened by this, since one of the top reasons to use open source used to be that open source software is smaller, faster, light, and a ton of other things, everything but bloated (as in MS software), but lately, seems they have fallen for the same mistakes we’ve been seeing for decades now in those MS-like companies (even them seem to be going small and fast, just look at the VS Express Editions and even Windows 7 against Vista), it could be interesting maybe to go look up who is working on Firefox right now, and see if the people who used to work on it a few years ago are still working on it today, i wonder about that..
(yeah, i know working on a software piece this big is no child play, but Mozilla used to have very good developers)
What happened?
No joy here, just complaining you know :P
Google Chrome 3 is out, no extensions yet :(
Sep 15th
Just read an article on ReadWriteWeb about Google Chrome, and the big news is…
Well Google has released version 3 of the Chrome browser, it has several features that were enabled in the development channel, but no extensions support yet :(
Chrome has been out only about a year, so it is no surprise there are lots of things that are still partially implemented, hell, there are other browsers out there that have been out for years and years and still have a lot of things not working Ok, a year is not that long, and Chrome already does a lot of things and is very stable, so no more complains from my part, just a little disappointed because i will have to keep using the same old stuff, again..
Something i wonder is, how toolbars will be integrated into the UI, i guess the time of a clean User Interface will be over as soon as toolbars for the most used sites are made available, how will Google handle this without loosing one of Chrome’s main “features”?
Link to article here: www.readwriteweb.com
Google Chrome Extensions Support
Sep 11th
It seems Google Chrome is getting very near to enabling extension support in the release build, i hope they get to it soon, as i am really tired of having a browser that eats 300 MB of ram or more just with 3 o 4 tabs open, what happened to you Firefox?
Just finished installing the most recent beta of Chrome, so far so good, a little slow at times, i did notice that, if i minimize the browser and spend too much time on other applications, when I return to the browser, pages are drawn very slowly, but once i have moved between tabs, everything is back to normal, seems like a windows issue, as if it will page to disk all the browser memory or give it very low priority while it is in the background, hopefully this won’t happen in the release version.
Oh yeah, and themes can’t be selected again once you download them, i noticed Chrome will download the them every time i select it, so if i want to try another theme and then return to the previous one i had, it will be downloaded again, but i guess this is still an unfinished feature and the version i am using is beta and this post was supposed to be all about browser extensions and not theme support, so…
This site has very good info about Chrome extensions: http://www.chromeplugins.org/
Latest Chrome beta can be downloaded here: http://www.google.com/intl/en/landing/chrome/beta/
And if you want to enable the developer channel to test the new stuff, download Google Chrome Channel Changer here: http://code.google.com/p/chromium/downloads/list

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