• Google claims Chrome is now faster than ever but Im still worrie

    From TechnologyDaily@1337:1/100 to All on Fri Jun 6 12:00:09 2025
    Google claims Chrome is now faster than ever but Im still worried that the browser remains a RAM hog

    Date:
    Fri, 06 Jun 2025 10:51:56 +0000

    Description:
    Google boasts that Chrome is 10% faster than it was last year after under-the-hood tuning.

    FULL STORY ======================================================================Google has made a number of under-the-hood tweaks to Chrome It claims the browser is now 10% faster than it was a year ago Thats based on benchmarking with Speedometer 3.0, but we're not shown comparative results with other popular web browsers

    Google has boasted that Chrome is now faster than ever, outlining the improvements it's made to its popular web browser to achieve this speed
    boost.

    Neown flagged up the latest blog post from Google in a series entitled the Fast and the Curious for those who are intrigued to see what tinkering
    Google has been doing.

    Were told that Chrome has recorded its highest score ever on Speedometer 3.0, a browser benchmarking tool, and that its now 10% faster than in August 2024 with the release of the latest version 139 (still in testing, in the Dev channel).

    Google says these improvements have been possible due to the Chrome team working across all the main rendering paths of the browser, referring to the fundamental mechanisms that convert the nuts-and-bolts of code for a website into a visible web page in Chrome.

    With that work happening more swiftly across multiple fronts, you see web pages rendered in the browser a bit faster, and it should act more responsively overall.

    Clearly, though, performance mileage depends not just on the browser, but on
    a lot of factors (including any given website itself, and how its
    implemented, alongside the spec of the PC and its current overall workload). (Image credit: Pixabay) Analysis: faster than ever but some RAM concerns remain

    Theres a fair bit of techie detail provided in terms of the exact tweaks Google has applied here, but to summarize, they include memory-related optimizations, better use of caches, and work on refining data structures.

    Fortunately, us mere non-programmer mortals dont need to know those ins and outs. The simple takeaway is that, as mentioned, Chrome is now 10% faster at least based on this run of benchmarking.

    This is the latest in a series of boosts for Chrome, as Google showed us how much faster its browser was at around the same time last year, as Neowin pointed out.

    The benchmarking tool employed, Speedometer, is a respected suite of tests
    for web browsers, generally acknowledged to reflect a real-world browsing experience with a commendable degree of accuracy. What we dont see here, though, are any comparative results that show how fast Edge , or Firefox, or some of the other best web browsers are in relation to Chrome.

    That said, a quick scan of recent independent testing with Speedometer does suggest that Chrome is no slouch, and it seems like it currently has the edge (no pun intended) over other browsers.

    Google appears to be doing good work on the performance front, then, despite Chromes reputation as a RAM hog, an issue it has sought to address. There
    have been improvements in terms of streamlining memory usage with Chrome in the more recent past, though and overall, Googles browser seems nippy enough these days.

    That said, concerns around RAM-related performance headwinds remain. How much of this is down to tainted perceptions is debatable, but complaints certainly persist on various online forums that Chrome doesnt fare so well here, and overreaches with its demands on the system, particularly with lower-end PCs that arent well-equipped in the RAM department.

    Theres more to web browsers than speed, too, and one of the thornier
    remaining issues for Chrome is one of trust or rather a lack of it,
    regarding Google spying on its users, which is a common theme in terms of accusations leveled online. Not that Google is alone in terms of tech giants in this respect far from it. You might also like Windows 11 is getting some big upgrades to tackle dreaded boot failures and help novices set up their new PC Microsoft gets rid of Edge uninstall advice page after facing
    criticism over it having nothing to do with removing the app, and just promoting the browser instead How to use Microsoft Edge



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    Link to news story: https://www.techradar.com/computing/chrome/google-claims-chrome-is-now-faster- than-ever-but-im-still-worried-that-the-browser-remains-a-ram-hog


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