On 11/13/2012 7:21 PM, Ron Hunter wrote:
> On 11/13/2012 4:55 AM, Wayne wrote:
>> On 11/13/2012 2:51 AM, V S Rawat wrote:
>>> On 11/13/2012 1:20 AM, Millwood wrote:
>>>> V S Rawat wrote:
>>>>> mine is 3-4 year old dual core 2.0 GHz with 2 GB DDR2 RAM, so I
>>>>> guess it
>>>>> would now qualify in the cheap category. is that the reason for slow
>>>>> performance?
>>>>
>>>> A 64 bit OS uses more memory than a 32 bit OS, since addresses in data
>>>> structures are twice as large, and often some integers are also
>>>> enlarged
>>>> from 32 to 64 bits. And there is a small additional cost when 32 bit
>>>> applications need to get kernel services.
>>>>
>>>> Which leads to the question - why are you running the 64 bit version on
>>>> a 2GB machine? The fundamental advantage of the 64 bit version is that
>>>> it can exploit 4GB and larger memories, and run the 64 bit versions
>>>> applications which can exploit virtual memories larger than 4GB, of
>>>> course backed by enough physical memory to make it useful.
>>>
>>> My task manager shows ff, tb, orbit downloader, flashnote and rocketdock
>>> as the only 32 bit running apps, rest are all 64 bits.
>>>
>>> Chrome is also 32 bit and they are not even trying to go 64.
>>>
>>> What are ff/tb's plans to go for 64 bit?
>>>
>>> It should otherwise it will loose market share fast. I have heard that
>>> even next size "84 bits" apps and drivers have started coming out. How
>>> long can mozilla remain with 32 bit.
>>>
>>> All these rapid release didn't add much benefit to users in GUI, so much
>>> bandwidth wasted in downloading updates again and again. So mozilla can
>>> take load when it wants. Hope it would take load in the direction of 64
>>> bit also.
>>>
>>> I wonder if there are mozilla users still using 8bit or 16 bit mozilla
>>> software.
>>>
>>> Thanks.
>>
>> iirc, most of these issues have already been well hashed out in other
>> newsgroups (including m.d.planning/m.d.platform). I believe the current
>> state of Firefox 64 bit is still summed up in
>>
https://groups.google.com/forum/?fromgroups=#!topic/mozilla.dev.planning/HMg_Cef17-M
>>
>>
>>
>> You can expect Thunderbird to follow Firefox's lead in this area.
> So, the short answer is 'not now'.
> For those who want to see what difference it would make, try Waterfox
> (note they include things you may not want in the install). I found
> bypassing the 'extras' (I call it malware), more trouble than the
> program was worth, so it is not on my desktop machine any more.
>
I downloaded Waterfox just now (16.0.1) and installed that. I didn't
find any single extra, no malware. Not even a mention or ad of any.
It was to-the-point, installed basic full program. and it ran.
While ff is running, clicking on wf startmenu link opened new window of
ff. I closed ff and then wf started. there also, no ad, nothing. it
checked add-on compatibility like ff does, and started the browser.
It automatically configured everything taking from my ff profile. I have
not yet digged whether it has made a copy to everything in its Users or
somewhere, or is it actually using the very same profile of ff.
As waterfox site page hosts just 3 addons (including silverlight :-) ),
we will have to use mozilla ff's addons for that.
But the above comments of O.P. about extras and malware are absolutely
wrong and misplaced.
so, firefox to waterfox. does anyone know about thunderbird to
waterbird? :-)
--
Rawat