Join the AMA (Ask Me Anything) with the Firefox leadership team to celebrate Firefox 20th anniversary and discuss Firefox’s future on Mozilla Connect. Mark your calendar on Thursday, November 14, 18:00 - 20:00 UTC!

Etsi tuesta

Avoid support scams. We will never ask you to call or text a phone number or share personal information. Please report suspicious activity using the “Report Abuse” option.

Lue lisää

Whenever it is not active, Firefox Mobile 10 constantly uses 10-40% CPU

  • 3 vastausta
  • 10 henkilöllä on sama ongelma
  • 1 näyttö
  • Viimeisin kirjoittaja fuzi0719

more options

Samsung Galaxy S Infuse 4g (aka "Galaxy S 1.5") with Gingerbread.

While it is the active application, Firefox seems to be using reasonable amounts of CPU. If it is not active, though, it constantly uses 10-40%, until it gets background killed, which obviously eats through the battery.

This happens with Sync disabled.

Is there anything I can do about this, aside from file a bug and wait for v11?

Samsung Galaxy S Infuse 4g (aka "Galaxy S 1.5") with Gingerbread. While it is the active application, Firefox seems to be using reasonable amounts of CPU. If it is not active, though, it constantly uses 10-40%, until it gets background killed, which obviously eats through the battery. This happens with Sync disabled. Is there anything I can do about this, aside from file a bug and wait for v11?

Kaikki vastaukset (3)

more options

Hi,

I'm sorry you are having this problem. You can Quit the browser when you aren't using it.

-Michelle

more options

Same problem on Firefox 10.0.4, using Samsung Galaxy S2 on 4.04.

By pressing the Home button, Firefox is put into the background and then starts consuming unacceptable CPU until it's killed.

Manually closing from the menu solves the immediate problem, but makes me want to switch to another browser.

more options

Letting Firefox run like this in the background and eating through a fully-charged battery in less than 3 hours is simply ludicrous. No other Android app I've ever encountered works this way. I use Firefox exclusively on my desktop and laptop and was looking forward to using it on my mobile so I could take advantage of sync. But, after finding my phone completely discharged, as soon as I had enough power to restart, I yanked Firefox off as quick as possible. Not funny. Not acceptable, especially since there is NO WARNING of this behavior. WTH are you thinking??????