![clicktoflash for firefox clicktoflash for firefox](https://www.idg.se/editorial/0/path/1.686235!imageManager/2770702183.jpg)
I find it difficult to drag myself away from using Safari though. It does become slow switching tabs at times and will also do those repaints as described actually fairly quickly. With this release plus now 8GB of RAM (had to see if that would help, yes, I got it pretty much mainly for Safari!) Safari doesn't crash/freeze when left open for days. It's gotten different in the latest release. It's like having a bunch of clutter on your desk but knowing exactly where everything is.Īnyway, Safari has been unstable used this way for ages. I have yet to find a better organizing system for coming back to tabs I need to see again. Sometimes I thought I was the only nut using Safari with a few dozen tabs in several windows open and trying to leave it open for days at a time. I still like Safari in principle and suspect that they’ll fix it up before And I’m not even using a Flash blocker I still don’t likeįlash, it’s just that both Chrome and Firefox seem less traumatized by it.
![clicktoflash for firefox clicktoflash for firefox](https://whoer.net/blog/img/flash-in-browser-1.jpg)
They used to be Chrome, Safari, and Firefox, respectively. Google+ anyone who knows what “AFYD” stands for will understand why. Personal Gmail, which isn’t the same account as for Logged into the Googleplex, one for news and banking and Google+, and one for It turns out that for me, it’s convenient to run three browsers: One But that just seems to be what a modern Web Even sprucing up this blog’s typography has involved quite a bit of
#Clicktoflash for firefox code#
JavaScript code sloshing around in the background. Web apps that are extremely heavyweight in terms of the amount of To be fair, part of the problem is the proliferation of
#Clicktoflash for firefox full#
Them being full of dynamic code, the whole system gets increasingly slow and When you have a few dozen tabs open, some of them for days, and some of What’s consuming the system’s CPU and memory. The WebProcess and Safari processes feature prominently in readouts of
![clicktoflash for firefox clicktoflash for firefox](https://tykim.files.wordpress.com/2010/04/screen-shot-2010-04-18-at-9-21-19-am.png)
Overloaded, you get a lot of gratuitous repaints. Switching from tab to tab is sluggish, and when the system gets This doesn’t seem to be working out that well. In recent releases, Safari has been re-architected, with some of the workįarmed out to a thing called “WebProcess”. I generally prefer itsĬhoices in framing and ergonomics and shortcuts over all For some years, Safari has been my default browser.