Posted on 01/24/2005 3:04:40 PM PST by Terpfen
2005: "Hope I did a service to some FReepers today."
2006: and even a year later you helped some none FReepers. See
"I know on the current Firefox, you can take measures [freerepublic.com / http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-bloggers/1327586/posts] to restrict its size but I think it starts to thrash when I go to a largely intensive Flash site. "
From
Firefox 2.0 RC3 Released
http://slashdot.org/articles/06/10/17/1215241.shtml
Yeah, this article ranks pretty high on search engine results lists. I'm amazed. Thanks for the notice!
You're welcome. That about:config is handy to keep as reference and use. I am using 2.0 now, BTW. Had to remove some extensions at first.
You're welcome.
And tell those same people that Firefox 3 is slated to fix a whole host of memory leaks, partially due to its codebase getting a fairly extensive reworking.
I installed a free Freememory program. It seems to have helped. Also if click the "-" hide the page/browser button at the top right it refreshes FireFox.
The Firefox memory issues may have little to do with Firefox itself, at least in some cases. I found the culprit was actually the popular Zone Alarm firewall on my PC. There is some sort of coexistence problem with Zone Alarm and p2p or tunneling applications that cause its memory usage to continually grow. For some reason, this growing memory usage also happens to Firefox. The solution for me was to remove Zone Alarm and repalce it with the free Comodo Firewall Pro. My memory issues with Firefox and the firewall are gone.
That’s a separate issue with Zone Alarm, which really isn’t as good as advertised. Sygate and Comodo are better software firewall options. (But it’s really in your best interest to get a hardware firewall.)
Firefox’s memory leaks are well-known, so it’s not a matter of Zone Alarm somehow interfering with Firefox. Luckily, the upcoming Firefox 3.0 fixes a good lot of them.
Another fix - boolean - config.trim_on_minimize - true
Base 12?
Mark
So, in other words, these different bases are just used by us dumb humans, because it's SO MUCH EASIER to represent 00011110 as 1e, or 30 decimal.
Mark
Yeah, I’ve heard it already.
Sheesh, you goof up a minor detail in an article meant to help people out and you never hear the end of it, even two years later.
See mine at 50. Any issues that I ought to be aware of?
another fix -set to 0 - browser.sessionhistory.max_total_viewers
No good deed goes unpunished.
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