By Kevin Purdy Browser Speed Tests: Firefox 4, Internet Explorer 9, Chrome 11, and MoreIt's been quite a month for browsers, with Internet Explorer and Firefox both dropping big new versions, and Chrome and Opera continuing their regular improvements. We tested all these browsers' startup and tab-loading times, JavaScript powers, and memory use for your fast-minded enjoyment. Note: We're working on an update for this post with scores for the current contenders, along with a look back at historical results. Stay tuned! We've been doing browser speed tests for some time now, and we've got a particular way of doing them. It's part user experience, with manually timed start-up and tab-load tests, and partly based on JavaScript and CSS tests that combine parts of the popular benchmark frameworks used by Apple, Mozilla, Chrome, and other browsers to pump up their releases. For this session, we're trying out the brand-spanking-new Firefox 4, along with the much more web-friendly Internet Explorer 9, and the latest iterations of both Chrome and Opera. Let's get into it. Click any of the images below for a larger view (which you'll likely need). Update: We're hearing in the comments that the 64-bit version of Internet Explorer 9 lacks some of the JavaScript improvements of 32-bit IE 9; we're looking into it, and will re-run our IE 9 JavaScript/CSS tests if necessary. Cold Boot-Up—Winner: Opera 11!
Tab Loading—Winner: Chrome 10 (Stable)!
JavaScript—Winner: Chrome 11 (Dev)!
DOM/CSS—Winner: Opera 11!
Memory Use (No Extensions)—Winner: Chrome Dev and Opera 11!
Memory Use (with Five Extensions)—Winner: Opera 11 & Firefox 4!
Overall ScoresEvery browser has a unique value proposition for each user, and maybe you need certain features more than others ... blah, blah, blah. What if you ranked each browser in a few major categories, first place through fifth, then divided their sum showings by the total possible? Here's how that would shake out, if the competition included cold starts, nine-tab loading, JavaScript, DOM/CSS, and memory use.
A few caveats, then: Internet Explorer 9 is actually a pretty nice browser to use, once it's loaded, and with memory as an out-of-mind concern. And Firefox 4 definitely feels faster, snappier, and less prone to drifting into lag-iness. And as for why Chrome's Dev version seemed to fall behind the Stable version in certain tests, well, we don't quite grasp all the vagaries of development, and it is, after all, a "no promises" download. Historical ResultsWant to see how Internet Explorer improved from version 8 to 9? Get a sense of where the (long) road from Firefox 3.6 to 4 ended up? Here's a few charts combining results from our previous tests with today's release. Cold StartsNine-Tab LoadingJavaScript TestsMemory Use with Extensions InstalledThose are our findings from a lot of timer-clicking, patient test-loading, and memory measuring. Each browser has its own use case beyond pure speed or efficiency, of course, and all hardware is different. But tell us how our tests match up with your own experiments in the comments. | March 22nd, 2011 Top Stories
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Selasa, 22 Maret 2011
Browser Speed Tests: Firefox 4, Internet Explorer 9, Chrome 11, and More
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