November 22nd, 2007 — James
This is a test conducted on Windows XP 64 bit edition.
Browsers tested
- Internet Explorer 7
- Opera 9.21
- FireFox 2.0.0.5
- Safari 3.02 for Windows
The test
You need a mouse with scroll wheel to do fast scrolling.
Open each browser and load http://www.jamespaulp.us/.
Open Windows Task Manager. Switch to Processes tab. Make sure Image Name and CPU columns are listed. If not go to the menu View->Select Columns and select CPU Usage column. Click on CPU column header to sort it by CPU Usage. Make sure you are at the top the list by clicking the home button. Keep the task manager window always on top.
Now switch to one browser at a time and start scrolling up and down in quick successions. Just move your finger up and down on the scroll wheel. Watch the CPU usage.
The Result
With Internet Explorer and Opera, you can see the CPU usage climbing above 50% very quickly.
Both FireFox and Safari remains below 10% level all the time.
July 19th, 2007 — James
Now that I have all the popular web browsers on my Windows XP 64 PC, I can do many side by side comparisons. See my previous post for a kind of performance test. Here is another one.
I opened all browsers and opened 5 tabs with same set of pages. Navigated through those sites for a while. Left it open overnight. Browsed a bit more. Set all browsers to the same 5 web pages on each tab. Look at the picture below for memory usage.
Internet Explorer: 136 MB main memory and 300 MB VM Size.
Safari: 78 MB main memory and 83 MB VM Size.
Firefox: 55 MB main memory and 42 MB VM Size.
Opera: 53 MB main memory and 53MB VM Size.

Overall, FireFox is the clear winner here. Based on previous performance test and this test, FireFox is definitely the overall winner. The last time I used FireFox which was more than 2 years ago, my experience with performance was not that good. I stopped using it. Now I see that it improved a lot.
July 18th, 2007 — James
This is a test conducted on Windows XP 64 bit edition.
Browsers tested
- Internet Explorer 7
- Opera 9.21
- FireFox 2.0.0.5
- Safari 3.02 for Windows
The test
You need a mouse with scroll wheel to do fast scrolling.
Open each browser and load http://jamespaulp.wordpress.com/.
Open Windows Task Manager. Switch to Processes tab. Make sure Image Name and CPU columns are listed. If not go to the menu View->Select Columns and select CPU Usage column. Click on CPU column header to sort it by CPU Usage. Make sure you are at the top the list by clicking the home button. Keep the task manager window always on top.
Now switch to one browser at a time and start scrolling up and down in quick successions. Just move your finger up and down on the scroll wheel. Watch the CPU usage.
The Result
With Internet Explorer and Opera, you can see the CPU usage climbing above 50% pretty quickly.
Both FireFox and Safari remains below 10% level all the time.
July 6th, 2007 — James
I use IE most of the times because many of the sites I visit support only IE. MSN, the default home page in IE has nothing to offer to me except the hotmail link. I almost never click on any other link than the hotmail link on MSN home page.
I am not always searching the web, so the plain Google is not the best home page either. But it has one advantage. It loads faster than almost anything else
What is your home page?
January 22nd, 2007 — James
After having a lot of compatibility issues between Windows XP Media Center Edition 2005 and StarDock Object Desktop, I installed Windows XP x64 edition. This is so far working OK. I have a bunch of issues with Object Dock though. Definitely not designed with secure computing in mind.
Today I was trying to download the beta from Adobe using IE7 64 bit edition. Since I did not have an adobe id, I needed to create one. On the first page I entered my email id, check the button that says “create one” and clicked the next page button. IE says it cannot display the page. I tried several times before I installed the already downloaded copy of Opera. Opera is not perfect. I am having trouble right now with wordwrap in opera.
But it did not have a problem registering at adobe and downloading the beta. I went back to IE7 and I still have the same problem. So, it was not a temporary problem with adobe site.
Remember, this is a problem with IE7 64 bit edition. Have not tried with IE7 32 bit edition.