Firefox 3.1 Speed For The Memory!

Hit News   January 22nd, 2009 14:49  
Firefox 3.1 Speed Memory

3.1 Speed Memory

3.1 is currently in its second beta release, and it already looks great. In fact, it looks set to deliver a lot more than one might expect from a typical “minor” software-update release.

recently posted a good summary of some frequently-overlooked new features coming in 3.1. One of the most important of these under-the-hood will streamline ’s , allowing it to run faster and far more efficiently.

Firefox 3.0 already delivered major improvements in ; most notably, it fixed a number of persistent, and often very annoying, memory-leak bugs. This time around, the changes in Firefox 3.1 will focus on the ’s normal , which according to this December, 2008 blog post already requires just two-thirds of the 3.0 requires for normal Web-browsing operations.

Keep in mind that with 3.1 still in beta, these numbers are likely to get even better before issues a production release. In any case, it looks like the changes will eliminate, once and for all, any lingering concerns over the ’s desktop memory footprint.

Another major new feature will allow 3.1 users to run in a privacy-enhanced browsing mode which allows users to browse the Web without saving any session information. This will give feature parity in this area with Safari and Google Chrome, both of which already offer similar capabilities. In addition, 3.1 will add the ability to clear the ’s history by time and to remove all traces of a previously-visited site from a user’s desktop cache.

Under the hood, 3.1 won’t just deliver improved . It will also, for the first time, use TraceMonkey as the ’s default JavaScript rendering engine.

TraceMonkey is already included in 3.0, but it is turned off by default (if you want to enable it –as many power users do, typically with great results — check out my previous blog post with detailed instructions on how to do so.) With TraceMonkey enabled, 3.1 will deliver eye-popping improvements in JavaScript performance, interpreting and rendering scripts between 20 and 40 times faster than ’s current JavaScript engine.

Development on 3.1 proceeded in parallel with 3.0; alpha builds have been available since last summer, and the current beta release is looking quite solid. If you’re even mildly curious about 3.1 (and either know how to back up your profile or don’t mind if something goes wrong and you lose your profile), check out the release notes and download the most current pre-release build here. Everyone else can expect a final 3.1 release to appear before the middle of the year.

Via   : How to Double Firefox Speed | PC Tips

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