Poll

Fastest browser.

Internet Explorer
2 (2.7%)
Firefox
14 (19.2%)
Google Chrome
46 (63%)
Safari
3 (4.1%)
Opera
2 (2.7%)
Maxthon
1 (1.4%)
Netscape
2 (2.7%)
Seamonkey
3 (4.1%)

Total Members Voted: 73

Author Topic: What is the fastest browser for my PC?  (Read 4629 times)

Don't forget if one animation breaks on a page you get a stuffty "AW, SNAP!" picture.


And when your tabs break it crashes, neither of these errors happen in Firefox.
Never happened to me, and I have an absolute stuff connection. (forget you, Wildblue.)

I find Maxthon quite fast running on 3 processes (Dunno what they do), but I am not really sure if I like it's RAM usage..

Eitherway, try v8 benchmark.

http://v8.googlecode.com/svn/data/benchmarks/v6/run.html

Maxthon 3:


Also comes with a stuffton of features..

Furthermore, me making a completely useless garbage review about it: http://www.leetlegacy.co.cc/reviews.html I mostly listed all the buttons on the screen, nothing really useful.. but eitherway.

(forget you, Wildblue.)
I felt you pain before. Now i switched to version wireless

[chromesnip]
If you want reliability
When I used chrome it would always break for stupid reasons and in stupid ways.
From personal experience I would rate it the least reliable. :P

I felt you pain before. Now i switched to version wireless
The sad thing is, Comcast stops service .1 mile from our house, and our neighbors get it through the woods.

What about Opera?
Can someone give me a pic of the in browser use. Maybe?
I <3 the minimalistic design. More screen space. :D
I thought it might bug some guys :D

BTW right now i'm using Google chrome.


What about Opera?
Can someone give me a pic of the in browser use.


Keep in mind that you can also bring down the tab bar and it will show pictures of the windows. You can find a list of features at opera.com



Keep in mind that you can also bring down the tab bar and it will show pictures of the windows. You can find a list of features at opera.com
Cool thanks


Everyone knows that the fastest browser is Elinks (or links, lynx, w3m, etc...), of course. Hands down. It's text only though.

That might seem to be a huge downside, but I think I can make a case for having a text-based browser in the modern age. There are no popups, ads, or javascript. Every single webpage is very easy to read and there's very little eyestrain. You will never have to deal with webpages crashing. Surprisingly, a lot of stuff works without any pictures - I can check my email, read the news, browse wikipedia, and post on forums in a text based browser. The only viruses you will ever have to worry about are the ones that you download and run yourself - you don't have to worry about plugin exploits.

I generally keep one on hand as a fall-back browser. When my wireless connection is stuffty or I just need to look up a wikipedia article really quick and I don't want to deal with all the bullstuff on the web, I use Elinks.

Here is a picture:
http://elinks.cz/screenshots/google-news--2004-09-29.png

Note that elinks runs on linux only. I have a copy of ubuntu server that I run in a windowed virtual machine so that I can use elinks and a couple other applications on my laptop running windows. You can also run it using cygwin. Finally, there are a few text-based browsers for windows machines, w3m comes to mind. However, I think elinks handles frames, tables, and colors the best, and it also has mouse support so you can actually click in it if your terminal application supports mouse input.



I use IE, but only because I'm too lazy to switch to Chrome. I've heard the latter is the best browser available, and after trying it for like ten minutes it's pretty fast with cool customization options.