8 Hacks to make Firefox rediculously fast

[i]Double your browser’s speed in just five minutes…
[RIGHT]Set your fox on fire with these eight handy speed hacks.
[/i][/RIGHT]

Firefox has been outperforming IE in every department for years, and version 3 is speedier than ever. By tweaking the right settings you could make it faster still, more than doubling your speed in some situations, all for about five minutes work and for the cost of precisely nothing at all. Here’s what you need to do.

1. Enable pipelining

Browsers are normally very polite, sending a request to a server then waiting for a response before continuing. Pipelining is a more aggressive technique that lets them send multiple requests before any responses are received, often reducing page download times. To enable it, type about:config in the address bar, double-click network.http.pipelining and network.http.proxy.pipelining so their values are set to true, then double-click network.http.pipelining.maxrequests and set this to 8.

Keep in mind that some servers don’t support pipelining, though, and if you regularly visit a lot of these then the tweak can actually reduce performance. Set network.http.pipelining and network.http.proxy.pipelining to false again if you have any problems.

2. Render quickly

Large, complex web pages can take a while to download. Firefox doesn’t want to keep you waiting, so by default will display what it’s received so far every 0.12 seconds (the “content notify interval”). While this helps the browser feel snappy, frequent redraws increase the total page load time, so a longer content notify interval will improve performance. Type about:config and press [Enter], then right-click (Apple users ctrl-click) somewhere in the window and select New > Integer. Type content.notify.interval as your preference name, click OK, enter 500,000 (that’s five hundred thousand, not fifty thousand) and click OK again.

Right-click again in the window and select New > Boolean. This time create a value called content.notify.ontimer and set it to True to finish the job.

3. Faster loading

If you haven’t moved your mouse or touched the keyboard for 0.75 seconds (the content switch threshold) then Firefox enters a low frequency interrupt mode, which means its interface becomes less responsive but your page loads more quickly. Reducing the content switch threshold can improve performance, then, and it only takes a moment.

Type about:config and press [Enter], right-click in the window and select New > Integer. Type content.switch.threshold, click OK, enter 250000 (a quarter of a second) and click OK to finish.

4. No interruptions

You can take the last step even further by telling Firefox to ignore user interface events altogether until the current page has been downloaded. This is a little drastic as Firefox could remain unresponsive for quite some time, but try this and see how it works for you. Type about:config, press [Enter], right-click in the window and select New > Boolean. Type content.interrupt.parsing, click OK, set the value to False and click OK.

5. Block Flash

Intrusive Flash animations are everywhere, popping up over the content you actually want to read and slowing down your browsing. Fortunately there’s a very easy solution. Install the Flashblock extension (flashblock.mozdev.org) and it’ll block all Flash applets from loading, so web pages will display much more quickly. And if you discover some Flash content that isn’t entirely useless, just click its placeholder to download and view the applet as normal.

6. Increase the cache size

As you browse the web so Firefox stores site images and scripts in a local memory cache, where they can be speedily retrieved if you revisit the same page. If you have plenty of RAM (2 GB of more), leave Firefox running all the time and regularly return to pages then you can improve performance by increasing this cache size. Type about:config and press [Enter], then right-click anywhere in the window and select New > Integer. Type browser.cache.memory.capacity, click OK, enter 65536 and click OK, then restart your browser to get the new, larger cache.

7. Enable TraceMonkey

TraceMonkey is a new Firefox feature that converts slow Javascript into super-speedy x86 code, and so lets it run some functions anything up to 20 times faster than the current version. [i]It’s still buggy so isn’t available in the regular Firefox download yet, but if you’re willing to risk the odd crash or two then there’s an easy way to try it out.[/i]

Install the latest nightly build from here, launch it, type about:config in the address bar and press Enter. Type JIT in the filter box, then double-click javascript.options.jit.chrome and javascript.options.jit.content to change their values to true, and that’s it - you’re running the fastest Firefox Javascript engine ever.

8. Compress data

If you’ve a slow internet connection then it may feel like you’ll never get Firefox to perform properly, but that’s not necessarily true. Install toonel.net (toonel.net) and this clever Java applet will re-route your web traffic through its own server, compressing it at the same time, so there’s much less to download. And it can even compress JPEGs by allowing you to reduce their quality. This all helps to cut your data transfer, useful if you’re on a limited 1 GB-per-month account, and can at best double your browsing performance.

Original article by Mike Williams – Tech Radar

Excellent ideas there Lonely! Cheers! :thumbsup:

:thumbsup: I was looking at number #7 some weeks ago but could not find a complete package only one you had to build yourself.

Had a play… crashed it :smiley:

Interesting tips. I might give them a go.

Although I have a better tip… Use Opera!!! :wink:

Its so much faster, more secure and more stable.

I tried firefox the other day and just hated it, it was incredibly slow and just kept crashing - perhaps as often as every 10 minutes.

Perhaps its something to do with the way I browse…
I typically have 30-50 open tabs in 1 Opera window and 5-10 tabs in each of 2-3 ie windows (trusted sites only).
And on that day was additionally using firefox in a similar fashion to how I use ie.

The only good thing about firefox I’ve found is that like Opera you can restart where you left off if it ever crashes.

So… firefox not built for multitasking?

I’ve just come away from Opera again. Opera is a very nice browser but there still exists some incompatabilites on websites.

Admittly though Firefox managed to crash a stupid amount of times over the weekend, so much so I’m already considering going back to Opera.

I’d come back to Firefox to give it a whirl and it’s not changed much.

I’ve had the odd crash in Firefox but nothing serious. Then again, I don’t overdo the open tabs so maybe that’s why. Never tried Opera but might give it a whirl. I believe they’ve just pushed out an upgrade but haven’t seen much about it. Must be keeping it a secret?

Version 9+ has been the same stylistically speaking with 9.62 being the current version.
The reason for so many updates is that usually within a month of security experts identifying a possible flaw, Opera release a patch for it.

Such a speedy turnaround time compared to the ‘denial’ path microsoft used to advocate is largely why its so secure.

Plus the entire program is only 5Meg!!!

By the way I only have 1 gig of ram on my current rig.

The memory footprinit is whats so amazing
Currently I have…

Opera 1 window with 38 tabs = 111Meg (+ 106 Virtual)
ie7 1 window with 3 tabs = 147 Meg (+ 123 Virtual)

Anyway - I dont mean to hijack your thread dude, Firefox and its tweaks definitely get my vouch over ie! :wink:

But since netscape was sold off to AOL who put back doors to record all your browsing habbits and report back to AOL, I had to move to something else. And after a few experiments - found Opera and loved it ever since.

Ah that’s why I went back to Firefox, Opera has broken the spell checker and when it used to work, it wasn’t automatic like firefox’s.

So I moved onto firefox to send some job applications out as it would check.

However it crashes regularly on youtube videos nowso it’s been backseated again as default browser.

If you’ve just updated Opera - do you not just need to reinstall the dictionary file as a seperate download? I only ever used it once a few years ago so I could be wrong but that may sort you out.

As for youtube… Well I’ve disabled everything in opera so some sites wont work.
However I NEVER get a popup - unlike ie which despite allegedly blocking them seems to let millions through every hour!
Also by disabling everything I’m far more secure against the likes of fly-by trojans/viruses.

Thats why I do still use ie for trusted sites like here or youtube.

Although I was thinking of having a second Opera installed thats less locked down to see how it handles things like that.

I was even thinking of firefox as an intermediary however, that crashed so much it put me right off…

I’ve gone back to Opera with Firefox as my backup. The simple Right Click > Open in x is a great boon in Opera as it allows me to open firefox on that pag just like that.

I instlled Aspell and Opera refused to believe me. I shall see if it’s still doing it but I think it’s broken.

1Q Am I right in thinking that Opera is a ‘pay’ type browser? As I said, I haven’t used it but I think I read somewhere you need to pay to use it… or have I got it wrong???

Yep, you’ve got it wrong. It’s free as any other browser.

It used to have two versions. Used to have one with ads in and one without (for a price) but now it’s free and has no ads.

drezha -
couple of things to try…

first just to check that you’ve installed both the ASpell program and the dictionary you want.
http://aspell.net/win32/

Secondly you could try replacing spellcheck.dll in Opera dir with some older one.
If you dont have one I could mail you one of mine to try.

Double checked this morning… I installed the English dictionary and not Aspell itself

:ghey:

All working now. Thanks for the help.