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Why the difference-Chrome vs IE
Why the difference-Chrome vs IE
When using the Chrome browser my hard drive is dead silent when changing pages, going to different sites etc but when using IE I hear the hard drive get accessed, click, with every activity? Can anyone explain why?
burns
burns
Re: Why the difference-Chrome vs IE
Internet Explorer is proprietary, closed-source application so it is hard to be diagnosed what is causing the HDD clicking. But you can be sure in one thing: Chrome/Chromium browser has more efficient open-source code and uses less of system resources than IE. My recommendation is: don't use IE if you really don't need it.
Current: R51e, X240, T30 and T23 (current project)
Previous: T420, T400, T43p Flexview, T40, R52, T43p 14"
My first ThinkPad was 570
Previous: T420, T400, T43p Flexview, T40, R52, T43p 14"
My first ThinkPad was 570
Re: Why the difference-Chrome vs IE
No browser that I know uses more memory than Chrome. It's a huge resource hog. And of course, open-source code is automatically more efficient than closed source.lukee wrote:But you can be sure in one thing: Chrome/Chromium browser has more efficient open-source code and uses less of system resources than IE.
Thinkpad 25 (20K7), T16 Gen 3 (21MQ), Yoga 14 (20FY), T430s (IPS FHD + Classic Keyboard), X220 4291-4BG
X61 7673-V2V, T60 2007-QPG, T42 2373-F7G, X32 (IPS Screen), A31p w/ Ultrabay Numpad
X61 7673-V2V, T60 2007-QPG, T42 2373-F7G, X32 (IPS Screen), A31p w/ Ultrabay Numpad
Re: Why the difference-Chrome vs IE
Might have something to do with how IE and Windows always seem to rely on hard drive swap space no matter how much RAM is installed. Maybe Chrome is designed in such a way to use only RAM (even if it's a bunch of it) until there just isn't enough.
Curious, burns, how much RAM do you have installed?
Curious, burns, how much RAM do you have installed?
Collection = T430 - T500 - R400 - X300 - T61 (14" WXGA+) - R61 (15" SXGA+) - T60 - X40 - T43p - T43 - T42p - A30P
Re: Why the difference-Chrome vs IE
dr_st: more efficient code != using less memory automatically. Better to use more memory and do less swap operations than to use less memory and swap each time a new tab is opened... at least it is better for user's experience to feel the system more dynamic. And the RAM is cheap nowadays - who cares about tens or hundreds of megabytes?
Current: R51e, X240, T30 and T23 (current project)
Previous: T420, T400, T43p Flexview, T40, R52, T43p 14"
My first ThinkPad was 570
Previous: T420, T400, T43p Flexview, T40, R52, T43p 14"
My first ThinkPad was 570
Re: Why the difference-Chrome vs IE
I do, because my T43 only has 2 GB of RAM. I'd like my applications to use the RAM as efficiently as possible, and not waste loads because of sloppy coding... leaving less for the OS to use as disk cache (resultantly slowing down the user experience).lukee wrote:dr_st: more efficient code != using less memory automatically. Better to use more memory and do less swap operations than to use less memory and swap each time a new tab is opened... at least it is better for user's experience to feel the system more dynamic. And the RAM is cheap nowadays - who cares about tens or hundreds of megabytes?
And indeed, open source does not mean much other than if you have money or coding skills, you can afford to make tailor-made changes to the code. Firefox is a good example of this (only seems to have been getting reasonable in behaviour since the last couple of releases).
Re: Why the difference-Chrome vs IE
... and the browser champ is? I use Chrome and agree it is a resource hog but haven't found anything that's much better. Any suggestions?
T40p- 60gb ssd, 2gb ram,2.0gHz Dothan, Win XPpro
X41t- 40gb hdd, 2gb ram, 1.6gHz, Android 4.0.3 ICS
L412- i3, 256gb SSD, 8gb ram, Win7 x64
760C - cmos battery code issues
X41t- 40gb hdd, 2gb ram, 1.6gHz, Android 4.0.3 ICS
L412- i3, 256gb SSD, 8gb ram, Win7 x64
760C - cmos battery code issues
Re: Why the difference-Chrome vs IE
Define "better"...
I use Kmeleon...and would not touch Chrome with a 10-foot pole, but that's me...
I use Kmeleon...and would not touch Chrome with a 10-foot pole, but that's me...
...Knowledge is a deadly friend when no one sets the rules...(King Crimson)
Cheers,
George (your grouchy retired FlexView farmer)
my music if anyone cares: https://www.youtube.com/@TheWaterMemory
PMs requesting personal tech support will be ignored.
Cheers,
George (your grouchy retired FlexView farmer)
my music if anyone cares: https://www.youtube.com/@TheWaterMemory
PMs requesting personal tech support will be ignored.
Re: Why the difference-Chrome vs IE
Better as in faster load times of web pages. Trying Seamonkey but no tabs.
T40p- 60gb ssd, 2gb ram,2.0gHz Dothan, Win XPpro
X41t- 40gb hdd, 2gb ram, 1.6gHz, Android 4.0.3 ICS
L412- i3, 256gb SSD, 8gb ram, Win7 x64
760C - cmos battery code issues
X41t- 40gb hdd, 2gb ram, 1.6gHz, Android 4.0.3 ICS
L412- i3, 256gb SSD, 8gb ram, Win7 x64
760C - cmos battery code issues
Re: Why the difference-Chrome vs IE
correction: SeaMonkey has tabs
T40p- 60gb ssd, 2gb ram,2.0gHz Dothan, Win XPpro
X41t- 40gb hdd, 2gb ram, 1.6gHz, Android 4.0.3 ICS
L412- i3, 256gb SSD, 8gb ram, Win7 x64
760C - cmos battery code issues
X41t- 40gb hdd, 2gb ram, 1.6gHz, Android 4.0.3 ICS
L412- i3, 256gb SSD, 8gb ram, Win7 x64
760C - cmos battery code issues
Re: Why the difference-Chrome vs IE
If you like having a lot of tabs open with limited memory use, give Kmeleon a shot.
...Knowledge is a deadly friend when no one sets the rules...(King Crimson)
Cheers,
George (your grouchy retired FlexView farmer)
my music if anyone cares: https://www.youtube.com/@TheWaterMemory
PMs requesting personal tech support will be ignored.
Cheers,
George (your grouchy retired FlexView farmer)
my music if anyone cares: https://www.youtube.com/@TheWaterMemory
PMs requesting personal tech support will be ignored.
Re: Why the difference-Chrome vs IE
I spent the past 2+ months using SeaMonkey browser and am pleased. I went to open Chrome the other day and it seemed to take forever. Looks like I drank a bit too much of the google kool-aid! Also gave K-Meleon a shot but haven't used it enough to comment. I'll be uninstalling Chrome tonight.
T40p- 60gb ssd, 2gb ram,2.0gHz Dothan, Win XPpro
X41t- 40gb hdd, 2gb ram, 1.6gHz, Android 4.0.3 ICS
L412- i3, 256gb SSD, 8gb ram, Win7 x64
760C - cmos battery code issues
X41t- 40gb hdd, 2gb ram, 1.6gHz, Android 4.0.3 ICS
L412- i3, 256gb SSD, 8gb ram, Win7 x64
760C - cmos battery code issues
Re: Why the difference-Chrome vs IE
Odd realization, I installed a SSD in my T43 and when I use IE I still get the clicking/snap sound. So it's not a hard drive noise but no closer to what it is, just wondering?burns334 wrote:When using the Chrome browser my hard drive is dead silent when changing pages, going to different sites etc but when using IE I hear the hard drive get accessed, click, with every activity? Can anyone explain why?
burns
burns
Re: Why the difference-Chrome vs IE
IBM T42p's (2373-Q1U & -Q2U): 2.1 GHz, 15" UXGA FlexView, 2 GB RAM, 128 MB FireGL T2, 128 GB 1.8" SATA SSD, IBM a/b/g, BT, Win 7 Ultimate
IBM T42 (2373-N1G): 1.8 GHz, 15" SXGA+ FlexView, 2 GB RAM, 64 MB Radeon 9600, 64 GB 1.8" SATA SSD, IBM a/b/g, BT, Win 7 Ultimate
IBM T42 (2373-N1G): 1.8 GHz, 15" SXGA+ FlexView, 2 GB RAM, 64 MB Radeon 9600, 64 GB 1.8" SATA SSD, IBM a/b/g, BT, Win 7 Ultimate
Re: Why the difference-Chrome vs IE
Johan, ha ha, I think you found it. T43 is not with me now but that "sounds" like you found it. I am not sure I ever dug in there before or knew it was there.
thanks
burns
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Saucey
- ThinkPadder

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Re: Why the difference-Chrome vs IE
When it comes to extensions, there will be some RAM used up for each one.
I was surprised when I checked the task manager onto why there were so many Chrome.exes running in the background.
They are for each extension when I had shut down the process.
I'm on the IE dislike bandwagon, Firefox works well on certain websites that won't load up on Chrome.
I was surprised when I checked the task manager onto why there were so many Chrome.exes running in the background.
They are for each extension when I had shut down the process.
I'm on the IE dislike bandwagon, Firefox works well on certain websites that won't load up on Chrome.
Coffee, F1, ThinkPads & Nikon.
Daily: PixelBook, W550s, MSI Raider GE78
Old Faves: A31p, 2521, 755CV, S31, 380Z.
Daily: PixelBook, W550s, MSI Raider GE78
Old Faves: A31p, 2521, 755CV, S31, 380Z.
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pianowizard
- Senior ThinkPadder

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Re: Why the difference-Chrome vs IE
For the longest time, I used IE exclusively, not because I was particularly fond of it, but because I didn't want to install an additional program. Recently, I started to use Chrome as well as IE, mainly because while running IE in Windows 7, I can't eject any of my USB devices. (Somehow, Windows Vista and 8 do not have this problem.) Also, some web sites display properly in Chrome, but not in IE. But IE is superior in several other ways: most sites load faster, keyboard shortcuts are easier to use, and text looks nicer.
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Acer ET322QK, T272HUL; Crossover 404K; QNIX QHD2410R; Seiki Pro SM40UNP
Re: Why the difference-Chrome vs IE
For those looking for a snappy, light browser, that opens quickly: try Opera. It has been my daily driver for years. IMO, Firefox (although popular) is about equal to IE in bloat and (lack of) speed. Having said that, Firefox is always my second choice, as it does have a ton of very useful extensions and plug ins, and is widely supported. After those two, I do keep a copy of IE installed for those times I "must" use it (eg., Windows Update, certain AutoDesk plug ins, Silverlight for Netflix, etc.).
I have not tried Chrome, need to get around to that one day. I guess I am just very happy with what I already use, especially since finding Opera, and haven't felt any further need to look around.
Generally speaking, I believe in (and recommend to people) keeping a few browsers installed on a machine, in order to have options to switch to in case something seems "funny" i.e., in the event of a browser hijack, sometimes you can switch to a different browser and work around the problem towards removal.
As much of a fan of Opera as I am, it pains me to report that recently they decided to discontinue development on their own underlying engine, and instead begin using the Chrome engine (or a fork of it?) on newer versions of Opera. I am not sure exactly when this change took place (and I suppose I should find out) but I would try to find the last version of Opera before switching to the new engine. They also made some other (IMO) undesirable changes in the browser around that time IIRC.
Going forward, my understanding is that the Opera programmers will be contributing to the underlying Chrome engine code base. My hope is that they will be able to influence that project for the better, streamline, reduce bloat, etc. but we will see. I am guessing it would be a while yet before any of that bears any fruit however.
I have not tried Chrome, need to get around to that one day. I guess I am just very happy with what I already use, especially since finding Opera, and haven't felt any further need to look around.
Generally speaking, I believe in (and recommend to people) keeping a few browsers installed on a machine, in order to have options to switch to in case something seems "funny" i.e., in the event of a browser hijack, sometimes you can switch to a different browser and work around the problem towards removal.
As much of a fan of Opera as I am, it pains me to report that recently they decided to discontinue development on their own underlying engine, and instead begin using the Chrome engine (or a fork of it?) on newer versions of Opera. I am not sure exactly when this change took place (and I suppose I should find out) but I would try to find the last version of Opera before switching to the new engine. They also made some other (IMO) undesirable changes in the browser around that time IIRC.
Going forward, my understanding is that the Opera programmers will be contributing to the underlying Chrome engine code base. My hope is that they will be able to influence that project for the better, streamline, reduce bloat, etc. but we will see. I am guessing it would be a while yet before any of that bears any fruit however.
All good things are Wild and Free.
What is free software and why is it so important for society?
(2022) Actively on the lookout for for 15" T60 FlexView / Hydis LED displays and parts, for my own usage. Kindly PM me your demands if you are willing to part with anything.
What is free software and why is it so important for society?
(2022) Actively on the lookout for for 15" T60 FlexView / Hydis LED displays and parts, for my own usage. Kindly PM me your demands if you are willing to part with anything.
Re: Why the difference-Chrome vs IE
Interesting; I wasn't aware of that. I have also used Opera for many years (and it had tabs before Firefox existed I believe) but in the last few they started making interface changes that I didn't care for. I'm currently using v12.16; the next version was 15 and it appears that is where they made the engine change. I installed that once and didn't like it. One thing that I like about IE compared to Opera is that it gets security patches without needing to do a full version upgrade. Do security fixes get backported to older version of other browsers?TRS-80 wrote: As much of a fan of Opera as I am, it pains me to report that recently they decided to discontinue development on their own underlying engine, and instead begin using the Chrome engine (or a fork of it?) on newer versions of Opera. I am not sure exactly when this change took place (and I suppose I should find out) but I would try to find the last version of Opera before switching to the new engine. They also made some other (IMO) undesirable changes in the browser around that time IIRC.
Going forward, my understanding is that the Opera programmers will be contributing to the underlying Chrome engine code base. My hope is that they will be able to influence that project for the better, streamline, reduce bloat, etc. but we will see. I am guessing it would be a while yet before any of that bears any fruit however.
Current Thinkpads:
X31, X40, X61T, X61, X201, X220 (i7 IPS), W520 (FHD), T440p (FHD),
T480 (QHD)
Dells: Latitude C840, Precision M70, Precision M4400, M6400 (WUXGA), M6600, M6700, 7730, XPS 13
Daily driver: MS Surface Pro 7 (i7)
X31, X40, X61T, X61, X201, X220 (i7 IPS), W520 (FHD), T440p (FHD),
T480 (QHD)
Dells: Latitude C840, Precision M70, Precision M4400, M6400 (WUXGA), M6600, M6700, 7730, XPS 13
Daily driver: MS Surface Pro 7 (i7)
Re: Why the difference-Chrome vs IE
IE hasn't been required for Windows Update in years.TRS-80 wrote:IMO, Firefox (although popular) is about equal to IE in bloat and (lack of) speed. ... After those two, I do keep a copy of IE installed for those times I "must" use it (eg., Windows Update, certain AutoDesk plug ins, Silverlight for Netflix, etc.). ...
So you must be talking about how slow the really old IE8 is on XP.
On Windows 7, IE11 makes Firefox look like a snail.
I liked the way someone else described Chrome on these forums, it's spyware with a browser front-end.
IE11 is my browser of choice with Win7, with Firefox as a backup for those sites that still haven't recoded their websites to work correctly with IE11.
Chrome uses vast amounts of memory and comes from the master of all tracking companies ... no thanks.
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Saucey
- ThinkPadder

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Re: Why the difference-Chrome vs IE
And MicroSoft comes at a close second...GACrabill wrote:Chrome uses vast amounts of memory and comes from the master of all tracking companies ... no thanks.
I mean Microsoft gave encrypted Skype information to the NSA without a fuss at all.
...and the fact that the Xbox One Kinect's camera is constantly watching you.
IE's "standards" is simply not complying with the other browsers compatibility with websites e.g. HTML 5 comparability.
I know IE has come a long way, but even then I wouldn't trust it with my information.
Coffee, F1, ThinkPads & Nikon.
Daily: PixelBook, W550s, MSI Raider GE78
Old Faves: A31p, 2521, 755CV, S31, 380Z.
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Old Faves: A31p, 2521, 755CV, S31, 380Z.
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QWERTY Andreas
- Junior Member

- Posts: 473
- Joined: Tue Nov 03, 2009 2:40 am
- Location: Copenhagen Denmark
Re: Why the difference-Chrome vs IE
If you want a browser that doesn't take a lot of resources, try "FlashPeak SlimBoat". I use it on my F-07C, which is a sloooooow thingy, and it really Works well. Much snappier than Chrome, IE, FF, K-meleon and so on.
It uses only a very low amount of the system resources.
It uses only a very low amount of the system resources.
Thinkpad Helix 2
Custom build ITX desktop (i5 4590, 8GB RAM, GTX 1050Ti, custom watercooling)
Thinkpad 8, Thinkpad W500, Thinkpad T61F 14" (2.53 GHz QX9300, 6 GB RAM, Quadro FX570m 256 MB), GPD win
FS: T61F
Custom build ITX desktop (i5 4590, 8GB RAM, GTX 1050Ti, custom watercooling)
Thinkpad 8, Thinkpad W500, Thinkpad T61F 14" (2.53 GHz QX9300, 6 GB RAM, Quadro FX570m 256 MB), GPD win
FS: T61F
Re: Why the difference-Chrome vs IE
Thanks for the suggestion.QWERTY Andreas wrote:If you want a browser that doesn't take a lot of resources, try "FlashPeak SlimBoat". I use it on my F-07C, which is a sloooooow thingy, and it really Works well. Much snappier than Chrome, IE, FF, K-meleon and so on.
It uses only a very low amount of the system resources.
I've just downloaded SlimBoat and will report back on how it behaves on older hardware when compared to Kmeleon which I found to be the best low-resource solution this far...
...Knowledge is a deadly friend when no one sets the rules...(King Crimson)
Cheers,
George (your grouchy retired FlexView farmer)
my music if anyone cares: https://www.youtube.com/@TheWaterMemory
PMs requesting personal tech support will be ignored.
Cheers,
George (your grouchy retired FlexView farmer)
my music if anyone cares: https://www.youtube.com/@TheWaterMemory
PMs requesting personal tech support will be ignored.
Re: Why the difference-Chrome vs IE
Slimboat, LIKE
Re: Why the difference-Chrome vs IE
One of the main causes for being unable to 'Safely Remove' USB devices is RealPlayer and its IE add-on.pianowizard wrote:... Recently, I started to use Chrome as well as IE, mainly because while running IE in Windows 7, I can't eject any of my USB devices. ...
Another solution that seems to have worked for many people is to change the 'Distributed Link Tracking Client' Service from "Automatic" to "Manual".
Re: Why the difference-Chrome vs IE
Finally, there's the solution of ignoring the "safely remove" and just removing the device.
Thinkpad 25 (20K7), T16 Gen 3 (21MQ), Yoga 14 (20FY), T430s (IPS FHD + Classic Keyboard), X220 4291-4BG
X61 7673-V2V, T60 2007-QPG, T42 2373-F7G, X32 (IPS Screen), A31p w/ Ultrabay Numpad
X61 7673-V2V, T60 2007-QPG, T42 2373-F7G, X32 (IPS Screen), A31p w/ Ultrabay Numpad
Re: Why the difference-Chrome vs IE
Yes, in theory I think it shouldn't be a problem. IIRC the USB connector standard includes the ability to detect that a removal is happening so that I/O can be stopped automatically. Not sure if that requires driver support though and if the driver is not responding it may not be able to interrupt I/O either.dr_st wrote:Finally, there's the solution of ignoring the "safely remove" and just removing the device.
Current Thinkpads:
X31, X40, X61T, X61, X201, X220 (i7 IPS), W520 (FHD), T440p (FHD),
T480 (QHD)
Dells: Latitude C840, Precision M70, Precision M4400, M6400 (WUXGA), M6600, M6700, 7730, XPS 13
Daily driver: MS Surface Pro 7 (i7)
X31, X40, X61T, X61, X201, X220 (i7 IPS), W520 (FHD), T440p (FHD),
T480 (QHD)
Dells: Latitude C840, Precision M70, Precision M4400, M6400 (WUXGA), M6600, M6700, 7730, XPS 13
Daily driver: MS Surface Pro 7 (i7)
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