Plugin-container.exe ate my CPU and my goldfish
After installing Firefox 3.6.4 and version 3.6.6 respectively, there was a process running in the background, called plugin-container.exe. It immediately began to eat my CPU, my RAM and my goldfish. I have a fish tank in my room and after installing the FF update, my goldfish disappeared. Can I get a new goldfish from Mozilla?
This happened
Not sure how often
== after installing v3.6.4 and higher
Tutte le risposte (7)
the-edmeister
Do you really believe Ask a new question will get you support when THIS question remains unsuppported and unanswered?????
Sure we're all grateful for the questions that are supported and answered but why oh why are so many left unsupported and unanswered?????
This problem with Plugin-container.exe hasn't gone away. It still exists today!
Modificato da george.kearse il
Please refrain from using so many question marks together.
The rules are the rules. You have a different problem, use a different thread.
Thirdly, the plugin-container.exe will not go away any time soon, nor is it a problem. The problem is with your plugins that you have installed probably without knowing, or with your (maybe outdated) flash. I don't know. Follow the instructions already given and if they don't work, say so. MAYBE someone will help you. If you're rude, you're definitely not gonna get any help, that's for sure. Not any more help that what has already been given, at any rate.
(XP SP3) Some very basic testing turned up this:
http://fantasy.premierleague.com/my-team/
i used the above website because i noticed i had it open when my plugin-thingy was bouncing around 10% and had been for an hour.
it seems that having it as the active tab will mean i get 10% cpu. having the site open as the active tab but minimising the browser is still 10%. having the site as the active tab but not the active window is still 10% switching to another tab drops it down to 0-2%.
so i tested it against other browsers i have.
Chrome does similar but i get 2x chrome.exe one at 7% and another at 3%. the site as the active tab but Chrome not the active window has 2x Chrome.exe 7% & 3% switching to another tab drops it to 0-2%. same same. but minimise Chrome and it drops to 0-2%.
with IE8 the site makes the process bounce around 10-20% with an estimated average of about 14%. however if i minimise it, make something else the active window or switch to another tab it drops to 0-2%.
People will notice plugin-thingy because its a stand out process (different, longer name – I did), it could function better by dropping to 0-2% when minimised like IE and Chrome, and there's a chance to be the best performing if it follows IE’s lead when not active, but essentially from what I saw its not really any worse than the others.
I just moved my company back to using IE9, so what about CSS not looking perfect, at least the PCs work, and don't grind to a halt because of some stupid little process.
This is really getting on my nerves now - comparatively to other Browsers now Firefox is eatin most of my CPU
I like the interface thats why I stick to it but the difference is fading and I am tempted to shift to other browser options
I hope they fix this shitty snag soon
"They" aren't going to fix it because it's not a problem that's fixable from their side (unless you're talking about the animated gif problem, in which case it's inbound for Firefox 10...). Please read the suggestions given previously in the thread and reply accordingly.
Modificato da Morbus il
This is a Firefox problem (at least in my case), and is caused by Flash. However, using any other browser - with the same version of Flash, does not have this problem.
And as others have said, this - along with its excessive memory usage - does make Firefox, an otherwise good browser, worse than its competition.
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