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All the Firefox 4 versions pror to Firefox 4.0.b7 have been slow but the latest version seems fast enough.
Opera is another browser thats fast.
Conclusion : Web Browser Grand Prix 2: The Top 5 Tested And Ranked
All the Firefox 4 versions pror to Firefox 4.0.b7 have been slow but the latest version seems fast enough.
Opera is another browser thats fast.
Conclusion : Web Browser Grand Prix 2: The Top 5 Tested And Ranked
Firefox is very easy to mess up, particularly when installing other browsers alongside it. I uninstalled all my browsers, except for IE, then reinstalled Firefox. I made sure all of them bits left from the uninstall were wiped as well. After doing this, Firefox ran great again.
Chrome is the fastest at executing JavaScript at the moment, but that position is always changing.
I recommend you use portable versions of browsers you'd like to test.
It wouldn't mess with your settings plus you could have as many parallel as you have HDD space
-DG
Thats what i do there are lots of advantages for portable software easy backup, always available if windows crashes. I haven't been able to think of any reason not to use Opera portable all the time now its part of the installer.
Firefox 4 b7 is a lot faster on my PC than previous 4 betas starting & loading tabs but the Peacekeeper scores have hardly changed.
And now I've found the
Hide Caption Titlebar Plus (Smart) 2.1.0 add on it will be useable on my laptop :)
Last edited by stve; 14 Nov 2010 at 23:10.
I mean portable like in "put it on a stick and use it wherever you go-portable" .
And NO it's not released by mozilla but from a trusted supplier of portable Applications (PortableApps.com)
After all what's the big difference between install and portable versions?
It's not like that's a complete new program. Mainly a few config changes as to where to keep the profile/extensions and where/how to use the cache function.
Unzip to a directory of your choice instead of some installation process.
The main advantage is, that due to those config changes the browser wouldn't mess with the system default settings for browser/HTML protocol etc. To "uninstall" you just delete the folder it resides in and you're golden...no garbage leftover files, no superfluous registry entries.
I always have a portable version of almost every browser at hand
Get your actual last stable version here:
Mozilla Firefox, Portable Edition | v3.6.12
and your last Beta of the next branch here:
Mozilla Firefox, Portable Edition 4.0 Beta 7 and Gecko Layout Engine Test Versions | PortableApps.com - Portable software for USB drives
-DG
If you do install to a USB Flash Drive (stick,thumb drive,compact flash card , Memory stick)SledgeDG
"I mean portable like in "put it on a stick and use it wherever you go-portable"
When you run it using a USB flash drive it will be very slow & only really good enough for checking a a few sites.
If you install it to a folder on your own or a friends hard drive you get full speed.
I don't run it from a stick...I just use the stick for transportation purposes
If you're allowed to do so it surely makes sense to copy the whole folder to the computer first and then run it from there. That's basically self understood, isn't it.Only on PCs where you're not allowed to install/save anything to the local harddrive one would run it from the stick.
-DG
Firefox 3.612 is holding out well for me with a few extensions and a ton of bookmarked sites
I do backup my bookmarks on occasion
anyone know why embedded youtube videos cannot be seen though?
my flash appears to be up to date