Having trouble with a slow Flock or Firefox browser? Been looking at all the hack pages where they have you messing around in the about:config area?
I have the answer for speeding up Flock and/or Firefox. And you’re not going to like it.
First off, let me say that I have one of the most badass laptops on the market today. Power is not an issue here. Nor is memory. It might be for you, which would make the desperate need for Flock or Firefox to “go faster” even more desperate.
Here’s how you speed up Firefox or Flock:
1. Turn off anything that says it is an “add-on.”
If you’ve been a bit overzealous with add ons, you’re probably seeing where I’m going here. You have a problem. This is an intervention. We’ll get you fixed up in a jiffy with the following 3 steps:
- Turn off all add ons for Firefox or Flock that you don’t use.
- Then seriously think about turning off the ones you use only occasionally.
- Then turn off all the rest your add ons if you want Flock or Firefox to be as fast as they can possibly be.
Add ons are the devil.
They are created to make you think you’re doing something cool or saving time. But behind the scenes, if you do a little digging, you can trace all add ons for Firefox back to satan himself, posing as an assortment of programmers.
You might have thought that the StumbleUpon add on for Firefox was a cool little time saver. Do me a favor. Open a new tab and type about:config in the address bar. Scroll down. If you are running the StumbleUpon add on for Firefox or Flock, you’ll see the devil in the details. That one add on will add up to 5 years to your load time.
You may think you’re saving time because of those neat little buttons on the StumbleUpon toolbar which allow you to Stumble any page you’re on without having to go to the StumbleUpon site.
This argument is like the “clean” electric car. Or the “zero emission” electric car. The electricity generated to run that car comes from coal. It’s just displacing the emission from your tailpipe to the power plant, but the effect is the same.
It’s a flim flam job, man! A shell game! Wise up! The “man” just wants to distract you with shiny things so you don’t notice that you’ll be as old as John McCain by the time your browser loads completely.
StumbleUpon’s toolbar for Firefox might “save” you time if you are comfortable ignoring the fact that using it is why Flock or Firefox take so damned long to load.
I don’t want to pick on the StumbleUpon Firefox add on exclusively. I said all add ons are the devil and I meant it.
Everything you add to your Firefox browser creates more work for it. Flock is even worse because you are already running all the friend crap constantly in the background as it checks in on your Gmail, Facebook, Twitter, Pownce and other social accounts - constantly.
(I’m a Flock user. I’m also interventioning myself here.)
2. Tabs are the devil.
I like to run about 8 tabs at startup. I would like to run more, like 20 or so, but I’m afraid I’ll either get caught in a time-space-discontinuum-fart or my wait at startup will cause me to go Rip Van Winkle on it’s ass.
The best way to make Firefox and Flock load up faster is to run NO TABS at startup. Of course, we’re not going to listen to this advice, are we?
So the next best thing is to limit your tabs to your email, your blog admin login page, and maybe a stats program or something you absolutely always check the minute you fire up your browser.
You can forego loading up PerezHilton.com every time you start Firefox. Hey, there’s a war going on, we all have to make sacrifices.
Flock and the Google Toolbar
One add on that I absolutely must use is the Google Toolbar. Except Flock has prevented me from running it because they’ve determined it is evil and dangerous. I literally cannot override Flock on this. It simply says “hell no, you’re not allowed to run the Google Toolbar. It’s unsafe. And stop trying to load older versions. We’re not stupid you know. We’re cutting you off for your own good.”
Why Flock hasn’t determined other more deserving and frivolous add ons are just as dangerous is beyond me. You’ll have no problem running tons of idiotic ram destroyers (with the cute sounding name “add-ons) found on Firefox Add-ons. Yeah, gremlins were cute too till you got a drop of water on them and all hell broke loose.
C. Consider not using a browser at all…
Always start with the easy stuff when troubleshooting. Have you tried not running Flock or Firefox at all?
Because there are no real solutions to the Firefox/Flock slowness issue for people who just want to run whatever the hell they want and still do it uber fast with no errors or lockups, the only real solution is surfing the web without a browser. It is hard to get used to, but it is blazing fast. Your only limit is your imagination because you’ll be using it exclusively to spider the web with the power of your mind.
And let’s not get all crazy and think IE is any better. It loads fast as hell because it doesn’t do anything! Once you set up IE to do all the stuff your Firefox browser does with 50 add ons, which isn’t even possible, you’ll go running back to Firefox hoping it will forgive you for ever leaving it.
4. Properly inflate your Firefox and Flock browsers…
Sometimes the most effective solution is the simplest. Until I realized the poor mileage resulting from improperly inflated browsers, I thought the whole problem was simply a lack of system resources. Now that I have my Flock browser properly inflated to 32.5 pounds, I know I am using less electricity, which is good for the environment.
D. Stop trying to make it faster…
The time you spend reading blog posts about the latest, freakishly illogical way to make Firefox or Flock run faster could have been spent waiting for 20 pages to load! Dude, the guys who created these browsers are the ones to make them faster. They’ve failed thus far. What makes you think your no-programming butt is going to do any better by reading a blog post about it?
Bottom line…
Surfing the web is a pain in the ass. No matter if you switch from DSL to broadband, or move up to a T1 line, we’re never going to be satisfied. Let’s get used to that. Since the 1200 baud modem we’ve been seeking a mythical Holy Grail of speed that is impossible to attain until we (meaning smart people other than us) attain it. Sit tight.
We’ll all have a laugh one day about how long it used to take to load 500 add-ons, 50 tabs, and all of our friends latest epiphonies on every concievable social network known to mankind.
With no one stepping up and saying outright: “This is as fast as it gets, stupid!” everyone, including me, will continue looking for some way we can squeak more out of our about:config lines.
Time travel will become a reality before these browsers will work better and faster while running tons of add ons and loading every website we’ve ever visited in tabs on startup.
Of course, if none of this satisfies you, you can always go check out what people are doing to make themselves feel better about the problem. It might not speed up or fix your Firefox / Flock browsers, but you’ll feel like you are in control of the situation.
And isn’t that all we really want?
Note: I don’t condone any of the following “fixes” and if you screw up your entire life from doing the things people recommend below, it was bound to happen at some point anyway. Darwin was a bitch.
How to speed up Firefox (Time saver: these are the directions everyone is using to get people to visit their site for the search term “speed up firefox.” You don’t need to click around thinking there is something else out there. They are all the same exact directions everywhere you go!)
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{ 7 comments… read them below or add one }
Anissa 08.19.08 at 8:03 pm
Speaking of Perez Hilton, and time space continuum…It seems as though your subscriber list on WARP SPEED!!
Sid Savara 08.20.08 at 12:37 am
This just in - Sid Savara registers mindfox.com
Kidding ;). I think it’s definitely a tradeoff - I constantly curse at my FF and/or Flock for running slow and bloated, but at the same time I really love all the extensions I use. For me, the instability, the occasional “white tab of nothingness” etc is worth it to be able to customize my browser as much as I do.
Sid Savaras last blog post..Why 3% of Harvard MBAs Make Ten Times as Much as the Other 97% Combined
Evan Hamilton 08.20.08 at 9:28 am
Hey Jack,
Funny post.
FYI, we disabled Google Toolbar because there is a bug in the toolbar causing it to read Flock 1.x as Firefox 3, activating features Flock 1.x (and Firefox 2, which it is based off of) doesn’t support. This causes Flock to crash upon startup. That’s a pretty lame user experience, so we’ve disabled it.
The bug has been reported to Google, and until they get to fixing it the best solution is to download the Flock 2 Beta, which is based on Firefox 3 and will run the toolbar fine (note: you may need to wait 24 hours after installing Flock 2 for the Google Toolbar to work). Plus, Flock 2 is much more performant than Flock 1, which makes it a good switch to add to your list!
Evan Hamilton
Flock Community Ambassador
evan at flock dot com
Chris Lang 08.20.08 at 3:24 pm
My FireFox will run 50 tabs with no problem.
And I run a GB of RAM and on W2K in FF 3.1.
The problem with FF is AJAX. Try opening a few FaceBook tabs and watch what happens. I call it the spinning wheel of death. FF compiles AJAX very poorly. Here are the solutions and they are not what you think Jack.
First off, update to 3.1. 3.0 sucked.
Next, look in Tools, AddOns, Plugins. No not extensions, plugins. There are three plugins that come with FF, the worst two are Microsoft DRM. Disable those. Why the hell is there a Microsoft DRM in FF?
Next get a extension called Tweak Network 3.1 it is on the Mozilla site. Google it. This will fix your network TCP/IP stack and FF will run much better. Much Much Better.
Next, go to Tools, options, security and uncheck the warning if attack site, and warning if suspected forgery. Way faster now.
Also, get a nice fresh update of Java from the source, not the Microsoft version, the Sun version.
Also turning off the Java Applet compiler will run FF faster too.
I can open 200 tabs and have no problems.
But then I run W2K, not that Vista crap. If MS7 does not turn Windows around, I am buying a FRAKIN MAC lappy. My buddy has a laptop like yours Jack, slow piece of junk. My 5 year old desktop is way faster and I am a web guy, not a hardware junkie at all.
Chris Langs last blog post..How to Create a Google Profile for Google Social Bookmarking
Chris Lang 08.20.08 at 3:27 pm
Also if you are on wireless look at a N router and wireless card. My friends alienware lappy pulls 30mb down running N. Gotta get a N router and a card. The card has 3 antennas. Makes like IDK, but allot of connections to the router at once.
That is the fastest machine at displaying a web page I have ever seen.
Jack Humphrey 08.21.08 at 8:25 am
Thanks for the tip Evan! I was hoping Google would just get on it and fix whatever was wrong right away, but this will do. I’m just loading google as a tab now for searches and using an add on for compete, alexa and pagerank monitoring.
Clunky, but gets the job done for now.
Chris Lang 08.25.08 at 2:21 pm
Like I said in my earlier comment, it is the JavaScript engine in FireFox that causes it problems trying to interpret AJAX, (that is Asynchronous JavaScript).
Just ran across this post talking about FireFox fixing it in their next release.
http://news.cnet.com/8301-17939_109-10023723-2.html
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