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Firefox 4 will be a "generation" faster than rivals

Firefox

By Nicole Kobie

Posted on 18 Aug 2010 at 17:22

The next version of Firefox will be "faster than anyone else," according to Mozilla's head of web development.

Firefox 4 is due out later this year, but faces stiff competition from Google Chrome 6 and Internet Explorer 9.

Chris Blizzard admitted Firefox isn't currently topping the various speed benchmarks, but said the browser will when all of its new features are included.

We'll be one generation ahead of everyone else

"What we've seen is that in places where our tracing engine gets used we are actually faster than anyone else, it's just in those cases where it doesn't fit that others do a lot better," he told an Austrian news site. "So we're trying to improve our baseline performance and combine that with the Tracing-JIT [compiler], with this we'll be one generation ahead of everyone else."

Despite the constant speed increases across all browsers, Blizzard said there was still room for improvement. "The current generation of JavaScript engines has plateaued, I mean the percentage difference we are seeing between all the current browsers at the moment is not very big anyway," he said.

New benchmarks needed?

He argued that current benchmarks weren't actually very useful, as they don't focus enough on "real JavaScript performance".

"Just to give you an example of this negative impact of benchmarks: We have to do stuff like optimising Daylight Saving Time lookups because that is influencing some benchmarks negatively, so we're not doing actual JavaScript improvements here," he claimed. "SunSpider has these problems, V8 also consists of some crazy code, so it's hard to find some good benchmarks."

Blizzard said developers seemed to be flocking to Chrome, but added that user numbers weren't always clear, as early adopters and advanced users spent more time on the web, skewing usage data.

He added that users don't just make their browser choice based on speed, saying features and user interface were usually more important.

"We know we're not going to be able to serve everyone's needs and that's not even our goal as an organisation," he added. "We want to drive the web as a platform and we've been pretty successful at that."

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User comments

Surfing's not safe when you're feeling bloated ...

How about developers cutting the bloat, and keeping browsers as lean as possible?

By monsieurtechnica on 18 Aug 2010

Acceleration

The one thing which IE9 does, which none of the other browsers have thought about, until now, is using the DirectX libraries to accelerate the rendering - the results have been very good so far.

Firefox is trying to jump on this bandwagon, it will be interesting if they manage to get this in for 4.0, but as they will need DirectX under Windows, OpenGL for Linux and the Core technologies for OS X, they have more work to do than Microsoft...

By big_D on 19 Aug 2010

"Generation" Faster

I hate to keep knocking the inarticulacy of PCPro journalism but the expression generation-faster is meaningless. The source said generation ahead and improved performance in the same sentence. Given the current rate of browser development a "generation" is not a long time.

By milliganp on 19 Aug 2010

So they what to get faster but what happening is the browsers are using more and more RAM now they using more more CPU now they are tapping into and using the GPU!

Also cutting back on the bloat would be better as well

Mark

By mprltd on 19 Aug 2010

Go on a diet.....

Firefox used to be my browser of choice but as it 'got older' it started to 'let itself go a bit' and piled on the pounds until it got to where it is now - a slow over-bloated browser. Mozilla need to trim the fat big time

By everton2004 on 19 Aug 2010

Speed isn't everything

I was dismayed that Firefox has removed the advanced about:config setting browser.tabs.tabMinWidth from firefox 4. There is now no option for me if I want more tabs to fit on the screen before I have to scroll to the side. Instead I have to create a .css file in the correct directory with code I don't understand.

Speed is nice but I prefer friendly software that I can tailor to my needs.

By shmaun on 20 Aug 2010

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