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- Hi, Worked for years, but today requires a new activation.... serial number 1045 1557 0885 5951 0032 1070 Activation Code 7067 3221 8552 6937 3433 2427 0144 3945 Activation Type: Repair 93:13 Many...
- Hi Susan, My mother lives in Colorado Springs and is about to undergo the Canadian passport routine. Did you find a place in the Springs for Canadian passport pictures?
- PHOENIX, ARIZONA For anyone in the PHOENIX metropolitan area who is looking for Canadian passport photos, I urge you to go to Hassan Photography. They were recommended by the Canadian Consulate in...
- Ok so after having my photo rejected i turned to the interwebz to find a location that does passport photos and the person behind the counter dosnt look at you like a monkey doing a math problem...
- Here is another list: http://blog.epicedits.com/2007/11/07/87-great-photography-blogs-and-feeds/
2 years ago
To improve performance when navigating (studies show that 39% of all page navigations are renavigations to pages visited less than 10 pages ago, usually using the back button), Firefox 1.5 implements a Back-Forward cache that retains the rendered document for the last few session history entries. This can be a lot of data. It's a trade-off. What you get out of it is faster performance as you navigate the web.
For those who remain concerned, here's how the feature works. Firefox has a preference browser.sessionhistory.max_total_viewers which by default is set to -1. When set to this value, Firefox calculates the amount of memory in the system, according to this breakdown:
32MB - 0 cached pages
64MB - 1 cached pages
128MB - 2 cached pages
256MB - 3 cached pages
512MB - 5 cached pages
1GB - 8 cached pages
2GB - 8 cached pages
4GB - 8 cached pages
(http://lxr.mozilla.org/seamonkey/source/docshel...)
No more than 8 pages are ever cached in this fashion, by default. If you set this preference to another value, e.g. 25, 25 pages will be cached. You can set it to 0 to disable the feature, but your page load performance will suffer.
2 years ago
2 years ago
Thanks for pointing out about:cache. Didn't know about that.
Looking at the data on about:cache, it looks like it measures the cache size's "in use" using the byte size of the original asset--but in the case of compressed assets (JPEGs, GIFs, etc.) it keeps the uncompressed data around in memory (have to verify this in the source). 32 MB cache of JPEGs coulud very easily be 600 MB worth of uncompressed image bits.
If this is the case, this is one shitty cache management implementation.
2 years ago
I can't go back to IE, though. Firefox is like a new, shiny Leatherman, and IE is more like a rusted hammer that you use to open cans of paint.
My solution? I use Firefox all day, and close it at the end of the day.
2 years ago
2 years ago
chrome://nightly/content/leaks/leaks.xul
I'm not sure which kind of leaks are tracked on that page though.
I had a bunch of crashes on Firefox 2. Never any on 1.5 or old Flock, so I'm suspicious that some recent features/changes that came into both Flock and Firefox should take the blame.
2 years ago
The Problem in my configuration is Firebug!
After the first start of Firefox it uses 60 MB.
But then it is growing and growing, after some hours it uses 300MB and more, maybe Firebug is logging every action and so on?
But disabling Firebug solves the Problem. It must be a bug in Firebug.
2 years ago
2 years ago
2 years ago
2 years ago
With firebug disabled it stays around 200-300 Megs. I open and close tons of tabs. I might have 40-50 tabs open at one time.
2 years ago
2 years ago
2 years ago
Prior to removing Firebug, my solution to the Firefox memory eating problem was/is to do this:
1. Set my Firefox Option (on the Main tab, at the top) to: When Firefox starts "show my windows and tabs from last time". This is a standard feature of Firefox.
2. Install the Restart Firefox plugin.
3. Whenever I notice that my system is sluggish, just restart Firefox. It basically does an in-place restart of all my tabs, seamlessly. This dramatically reduces Firefox's memory footprint, only takes half a minute, and replaces everything I was doing including web form content and authentication.
I can't find any downside to this approach, so I'm quite happy to recommend it.
2 years ago
1 year ago
This is top output:
PID USER PRI NI VIRT RES SHR S CPU% MEM% TIME+ Command
5148 esinev 15 0 272M 195M 24464 S 0.0 5.0 13:40.38 /opt/firefox/firefox-bin
prefs.js
user_pref("browser.cache.memory.capacity", 100000);
1 year ago
I even downgraded to 1.5 but left firebug active, now i'm uninstalling firebug I hope this works.
1 year ago
1 year ago
1 year ago
http://code.google.com/p/fbug/issues/detail?id=...
I personally can't live without firebug, so I suppose I'll just have to restart firefox now and then.
1 year ago
1 year ago