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Hierdie gesprek is in die argief. Vra asseblief 'n nuwe vraag as jy hulp nodig het.

Firefox is Slow and I know why

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Since HTML5 took over plugins, there are people that was forced to re-write their code to work in HTML5. However most software programmers don't realize the effects that this caused on the internet. The Internet is now Broken. Here is why.

A lot of websites require Java. No one supports the Java pluggin anymore, so only old browsers can handle Java. At this moment there is no fix for the Java Pluggin, only a temporary Bandage. Then there is the Flash Plugin, which use to be the problem. With the HTML5 released, every website that had Flash got upgraded to handle HTML5 and the Flash Plugin is no longer used, from what I have seen. And yet Flash Player Plugin is still Supported. WHY?

Second Major problem. Javascript, Jquery, Ajack, JSON, and any other form of Javascript. These programming languages uses your local computer resources to render a website. The bigger the website the more memory it takes out of RAM. However after about 1.5GB of Memory for Firefox, Firefox is unstable and wants to crash. Test this example by loading Yahoo.com on one tab. Yahoo is so bad that when you finally get to the bottom of the "Top News", Your Memory usage for Firefox is over 1GB of Memory.

Upgrading your memory and changing the website will not speed Firefox up. My Computer has 32GB of Ram and I still have a problem. The only way to clear the Ram, is too close Firefox completely and re-open it. Yikes. Switching to the 64-bit version doesn't fix the problem either. I also get window not responding in the 64-bit.

Javascript, Jquery, Ajack, JSON, and any other form of Javascript, has very nice features but lack communication to a database. Since Javascript, Jquery, Ajack, JSON, and any other form of Javascript, renders the code on the local computer instead of the server it is on, the server that has the database is having problems with DNS resolving to your local computer. In result, causing the browser to load very very slowly. Once it is loaded, then it is quick, but that two-way communication is very slow. People that program in Javascript, Jquery, Ajack, JSON, and any other form of Javascript, their local computer must be on the same network as the webserver so they don't notice a speed defenence and/or don't want to pay people like me to manage their server. Figuring out the problem was very easy.

I write in PHP, which the server processes the information, not the workstation. If the website is on the same server as the Database, the Database Queries is very fast. Faster than Javascript, Jquery, Ajack, JSON, and any other form of Javascript, however when the website is moved to a different server other than the Database server and if the DNS is not working properly, then you will get the same speed as Javascript, Jquery, Ajack, JSON, and any other form of Javascript. This is how I found this major problem with Javascript, Jquery, Ajack, JSON, and any other form of Javascript.

Until the Web world comes back to reality. I will be staying with Firefox version 51.0 32-bit.

Since HTML5 took over plugins, there are people that was forced to re-write their code to work in HTML5. However most software programmers don't realize the effects that this caused on the internet. The Internet is now Broken. Here is why. A lot of websites require Java. No one supports the Java pluggin anymore, so only old browsers can handle Java. At this moment there is no fix for the Java Pluggin, only a temporary Bandage. Then there is the Flash Plugin, which use to be the problem. With the HTML5 released, every website that had Flash got upgraded to handle HTML5 and the Flash Plugin is no longer used, from what I have seen. And yet Flash Player Plugin is still Supported. WHY? Second Major problem. Javascript, Jquery, Ajack, JSON, and any other form of Javascript. These programming languages uses your local computer resources to render a website. The bigger the website the more memory it takes out of RAM. However after about 1.5GB of Memory for Firefox, Firefox is unstable and wants to crash. Test this example by loading Yahoo.com on one tab. Yahoo is so bad that when you finally get to the bottom of the "Top News", Your Memory usage for Firefox is over 1GB of Memory. Upgrading your memory and changing the website will not speed Firefox up. My Computer has 32GB of Ram and I still have a problem. The only way to clear the Ram, is too close Firefox completely and re-open it. Yikes. Switching to the 64-bit version doesn't fix the problem either. I also get window not responding in the 64-bit. Javascript, Jquery, Ajack, JSON, and any other form of Javascript, has very nice features but lack communication to a database. Since Javascript, Jquery, Ajack, JSON, and any other form of Javascript, renders the code on the local computer instead of the server it is on, the server that has the database is having problems with DNS resolving to your local computer. In result, causing the browser to load very very slowly. Once it is loaded, then it is quick, but that two-way communication is very slow. People that program in Javascript, Jquery, Ajack, JSON, and any other form of Javascript, their local computer must be on the same network as the webserver so they don't notice a speed defenence and/or don't want to pay people like me to manage their server. Figuring out the problem was very easy. I write in PHP, which the server processes the information, not the workstation. If the website is on the same server as the Database, the Database Queries is very fast. Faster than Javascript, Jquery, Ajack, JSON, and any other form of Javascript, however when the website is moved to a different server other than the Database server and if the DNS is not working properly, then you will get the same speed as Javascript, Jquery, Ajack, JSON, and any other form of Javascript. This is how I found this major problem with Javascript, Jquery, Ajack, JSON, and any other form of Javascript. Until the Web world comes back to reality. I will be staying with Firefox version 51.0 32-bit.

All Replies (6)

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Plugins are dead, as much as you might dislike it they aren't coming back. Adobe has announced they will no longer be developing Flash, Java is starting to wind down the Java Plugin, everything is moving away from closed plugins to a more open internet. I do think it's interesting you think that Flash wasn't slow, as it was, often-times, slower than the HTML5 that replaced it, and on top of that it was notoriously insecure.

I know one thing that will continue to make your internet surfing experience slow and horribly insecure, and that it staying on an old browser. By not updating, you don't get the speed improvements and security fixes, not to mention new web features that a modern web browser brings.

I urge you to give Firefox 56 a try. It's going to be much faster than the version you use now, and on top of that, we have 57 coming in a few weeks which is even faster, as it includes the new Firefox Quantum engine improvements.

If you still have problems, I'd suggest trying a Firefox Refresh. It might clean things up for you. But by far the worst thing you can do is use an old browser and get left behind by the web.

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I gave firefox 56 a try, both 64-bit and 32-bit. I am not happy with the results. This is why I went back to version 51 for the Plugin support. Old computer / New computer same results and is not the profile. IT IS BECAUSE OF JAVASCRIPT and browser caching.

Java is on over 4 billion devices. Is Mozilla offering for free to update every device that uses Java to a different language? I don't think so.

Did you know that our US Court systems websites were designed in Java. I have a lot of customers that are lawyers that have to log into the Court's website that require the Java plugin to work properly. What does Mozilla have to say about that. I doubt Mozilla is planing on re-writing everyones elses website to not use Java.

So for those people, Mozilla loses support from the US court system, because they are not updating their website for a while.

BTW. Today, I stopped using Firefox for my personal web surfing. Browser caching is driving my crazy. Why is there browser caching, when there are cookies. They are the same thing.

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Hi ecornell, if your business or your happiness in life depends on the Java plugin, and you don't want to use Internet Explorer, you can use the Extended Support Release of Firefox 52 to use plugins other than Flash. You'll need the 32-bit version to run Java.

ESR was first developed to meet the needs of large organizations that wanted Firefox to change much more slowly, but anyone can run it. It will retain the features of Firefox 52 and get regular security updates through next Spring.


ecornell said

Did you know that our US Court systems websites were designed in Java. I have a lot of customers that are lawyers that have to log into the Court's website that require the Java plugin to work properly. What does Mozilla have to say about that. I doubt Mozilla is planing on re-writing everyones elses website to not use Java.

As you may know, Oracle has encouraging sites to switch to Java Web Start to preserve their investment in Java applet code. Java Web Start triggers an external Java host program to run the converted "applet" rather than having it run in the browser. For example, the USPTO converted last Fall (they are fee supported, which may have made it easier for them than for the courts): https://www.uspto.gov/patents-application-process/checking-application-status/pair-announcements

Server-side Java (JSP) is not affected by this issue because the server delivers standard HTML, CSS, and JavaScript to Firefox.

Browser caching is driving my crazy. Why is there browser caching, when there are cookies. They are the same thing.

Why do you say they are the same thing??

  • Browser cache: storage for pages, images, and other files previously downloaded from a site so the browser can use them again from a local copy and save on bandwidth/downloading time. Stored in a huge folder.
  • Cookies: snippets of text websites ask Firefox to store and send to the site with every request to maintain context in your use of the site. Stored in a database.

If you want to disable caching and see how that changes your experience -- assuming you have a fast connection -- here's how (in Firefox 51-52). Call up the Options page:

  • Windows: "3-bar" menu button (or Tools menu) > Options
  • Mac: "3-bar" menu button (or Firefox menu) > Preferences
  • Linux: "3-bar" menu button (or Edit menu) > Preferences
  • Any system: type or paste about:preferences into the address bar and press Enter/Return to load it

In the left column, click Advanced. Then on the right side, with the "Network" mini-tab active, click the "Clear Now" button, then check the box to override the automatic size and try 0 (that's a zero).

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I have tried the new version of Firefox. I would agree it is faster, however it still bogs down with the high intense web pages. Javascript, Jquery, Ajack, JSON, and any other form of Javascript, still has major memory leaks causing the browser become sluggish. Since these programming language is never finished loading in the background. Firefox can not print, while the page is loading. Can this message get removed and print anyways. I was hoping this would be fixed with the new version of Firefox.

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You can do a few things:

Disable Accessibility Services How do I disable Accessibility Services?

Update your Graphics Driver Upgrade your graphics drivers to use hardware acceleration and WebGL

Make sure you have no unnecessary add-ons enabled

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ecornell said

Since these programming language is never finished loading in the background. Firefox can not print, while the page is loading. Can this message get removed and print anyways.

Often you can stop the page load at its current state by clicking the X button in the toolbar (the reload button is an X while a page is still loading). Does that work on the problem page(s)?