I’ve loved Chrome (on windows) for many years but at this point when you open task manager it’s practically using up more resources than the operating system. Because it is. It’s essentially like running a second operating system…
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Great idea, Google should do that and call it like... Chrome O-- ChromOS, yeah that's it.
Exactly, should a web browser need to be a complete operating system, or can it just show you the damn internet? Feeling like a cranky old man here
A browser—any browser—does have to do most of what an operating system does. Every web page is an app and many of them are as complicated as desktop or mobile apps. Hell, a lot of them are full desktop apps—a lot of "native" desktop apps are just web apps running in a special browser window that lacks the usual browser UI.
Firefox also had one!
There is this misconception of "using a lot of ram = bad", but memory is not like cpu or gpu cycles.
Unused memory is wasted memory. Chrome will use available memory to improve responsiveness. Primarily the memory use comes from keeping all open tabs in memory, so they are in the same state as you left them.
When the system runs low on ram, chrome will start discarding old tabs and giving back memory to other processes. Firefox does the same thing.
Also windows task manager is very inconsistent when it comes to memory usage. Right now it's telling me chromium is using 1.4gb for 47 tabs. And memory usage is a lot more complicated anyway.
Counter-point: Chrome brought multiple computers/laptops to a standstill, but Firefox doesn't. I used Chrome for years and just put up with it... But the lagging/slowness literally stopped when I switched. So while I'm sure you're right in theory, something about Google's implementation sucked on all the computers I used it on...
Hmm…interesting. I didn’t know Chrome was smart enough to use less ram if the system is taxed. Figured it just always used a shit ton…which sucks if you’re editing videos or something and need to open a browser or something.
That's because it isn't as smart as it sounds. Like with everything in programming there's a tradeoff being made. This behavior runs the risk of making the computer unresponsive while the garbage collector and the scheduler run after each other trying to clean house. “Unused memory is wasted memory” is kind of a fallacy. Overextending and requesting the OS for more memory than is available will always hurt performance. Ram operations aren't free, however much software engineers like to pretend they are. Neither are scheduling tasks. They cost time and responsiveness and can add up fast.
One of the immediate consequences, for example, is that if the users wants to interact with one of the discarded tabs, now the browser has to re-download the page (internet IO is insanely slow compared to disk operations), reload it to memory from disk cache which can also be slow—specially if the disk is busy with other IO—discard other older tabs to make room (compounding the problem), be slapped in the wrist because the OS says “No, you can't have DaVinci's RAM!” scramble for some more ram from some other idle task, reestablish the page state which might've been lost. Etc. it becomes messy fast, and now the user is frustrated that “I was reading this page a minute ago, why is it taking so long to load again, is my OS frozen? Damn I lost the forms I had partially filled?” So no, ballooning memory until it's all used up is not inherently always a good strategy. Nevermind that Chrome (and FF as well) have been found to have severe memory leaks that come and go.
Switched to Firefox years ago and never looked back.
Oh look, it's the daily "Firefox outperforms Chrome" post...
EDIT: yesterday's post: https://lemmy.world/post/1779611
From the same user too... This account just spams articles to this community and never comments. Looks like an old reddit-style karma farmer
It's an historic day! Also within 24h Google starts floating DRM websites
More reasons to keep using Firefox just keep on coming up like excellent extensions, in-browser PDF editor, and now more speed. I switched to Firefox 2 years ago with uBO and I don't think I'd ever switch back to Chrome.
Not surprising, considering how bloated Chrome is.
Switched to Firefox and Bitwarden due to Lemmy feedback. Haven't looked back.
I always found Chrome really laggy and swapped it for Firefox because it seemed lighter and faster.
Same, whenever I tried and use Chrome with another application running, it always slowed down my computer an insane amount. Firefox doesn't do that, I can actually use multiple programs on my machine with Firefox open.
There is no way its the first time. Firefox has been faster for years.
This is huge. I'm actually starting to get optimistic about the future of the internet.
As someone that recently moved from Chrome to Firefox, I can definitely confirm this.
I did to. Chrome is so bloated.
It's good to see this result replicated. The only thing I wish Firefox had natively was tab groups, they're a really useful feature for various organizing things. Otherwise, they're clearly one of not the best browser on the market.
It’s good to see this result replicated. The only thing I wish Firefox had natively was tab groups, they’re a really useful feature for various organizing things. Otherwise, they’re clearly one of not the best browser on the market.
Just use "Simple Tab Groups" extension. It's pretty good. And on top of that you can use other extensions, so that for example all tabs within a group automatically get added to a container (isolating them from other tabs). Really useful when shopping for stuff so advertisers can't track you around different shopping sites (or at least it makes it more difficult)
funny thing actually: Firefox had tab-groups built in. They then decided to remove it as an builtin feature and offer it as an extension instead, but not long after, when they switched the extension system, the extension was no longer supported
I've heard that. I wonder why they removed native functionality for tab groups, was there some problem with them?
Maybe bad code quality? I don't remember. It always worked fine for me.
I love firefox. I love the freedom you have with the browser. I got vertical tabs and a good theme I'm happy.
On low end PCs, Firefox always outspend chrome, at least for me. I remember trying to play happy wheels on my think pad laptop back in the day and I would get low fps on chrome but never on Firefox. That experience is what made me switch to the superior browser.
Not surprising as Chrome has been getting more bloated all along. Then again, I personally use Vivaldi as Firefox doesn't have a built-in translator tool.
Vivaldi is chromium based, so it's pretty much chrome with a different UI.
Translator here. Beware of translation tools. It's fine for personal use and basic understanding but it's not up to the task for the translation of complex stuff or technical stuff. It's good at creating text that looks legit but can sometimes contain critical errors.
I once worked on a medical device and used machine translation to test it. The text was fine but some numbers were changed. This is a huge error.
It's weird that it's not built in but there is a Mozilla add-on for it to provide on-device translations https://addons.mozilla.org/en-GB/firefox/addon/firefox-translations/
Had been using Firefox before I had to move away due to persistent crashing of Firefox and Surfshark VPN extension not working.
I have been using Edge and I will now try using Firefox again.
Do we have these feature (or extensions) I have been using in Edge?
- vertical tab
- tab group
I use tree style tabs and the collapsible hierarchical nature of them act like defacto groups, though there may be another extension specifically for grouping that I've not heard of
Wow that's awesome looking, thx for the link!
these features first appeared in Firefox... I've been using tab groups and tree-style tabs(/vertical tabs) for longer than Edge exists.
Extensions or built-in?
I didn't notice them.
Extensions. Although, tab groups used to be built in.
Thanks.
I am gonna try Tree style tab and Simple Tab Group with its extensions.