Why is SeaMonkey 2.19 faster than FireFox 22?
FF22 is soo slow on onepagelove.com and other sites than SM219.
FF22 even stalls on site with more than 4 tabs open.
The site is all about web & graphic design ;)
I am basically using the same add-ons for both browsers.
Both browsers had a total clean install including registry & hidden folders.
Zmodyfikowany przez k-art w dniu
Wszystkie odpowiedzi (7)
Im not sure why, they run the same engine, gecko. Trieddisabling HWA?
Zmodyfikowany przez kobe w dniu
hardware acceleration OFF
graphics drivers Updated
OS Tweak for speed ;)
Opera 12.16 runs circles around these two; but Opera has gone over to the dark side w/ Opera Next abomination based on chrome.
Everything that made Opera great is GONE!
Zmodyfikowany przez k-art w dniu
Looks like Ghostery & Adblock Edge do cause some slow startups, but they keep the spyware ad junk away too!
I'm also using Memory Fox, Web Developer Toolbar, Ant-Adblock, Flashblock.
I don't need NoScript since I can do that w/ WDT ;)
Create a new profile as a test to check if your current profile is causing the problems.
See "Creating a profile":
- https://support.mozilla.org/kb/profile-manager-create-and-remove-firefox-profiles
- http://kb.mozillazine.org/Standard_diagnostic_-_Firefox#Profile_issues
If the new profile works then you can transfer some files from an existing profile to the new profile, but be careful not to copy corrupted files.
The add-ons I need are the performance killers, but I need them to get the job done.
The all-in-one SeaMonkey Suite should be slower since it has so much more going on than separate Firefox & Thunderbird applications.
I like all the bells & whistles available for Firefox, but the performance is a real letdown.
There shouldn't be any difference in performance between SeaMonkey and Firefox when it comes to web pages because they both use the same rendering engine. It is when you start customizing a browser via extensions or otherwise that things are changing and a lot of extensions can have quite an impact on the performance. Extensions are mostly written in JavaScript code and that is always slower than C++ code that makes the most part of the internal code.
I tested Comodo IceDragon for a few days & found some add-on issues: "Memory Fox" did not work. "Web Developer Toolbar" had a dark background.
Speed wise it was a little faster after first; then it started getting slower & pausing on same pages FF did. I saw little reason not to slay the IceDragon...
It's not browser cache & history because everything is cleared when closed & then cCleaned.
Zmodyfikowany przez k-art w dniu