- Google has made a series of underground settings for Chrome
- States that the browser is now 10% faster than a year ago
- That is based on the comparative evaluation with velocimeter 3.0, but we are not shown comparative results with other popular web browsers
Google has boasted that Chrome is now faster than ever, describing the improvements he has made to his popular web browser to achieve this speed impulse.
Neown marked Google blog post in a series entitled ‘Fast and the Curious’ for those who are intrigued to see what Tinking Google has been doing.
We are told that Chrome has registered its highest score in velocimeter 3.0, a tool for comparative browser evaluation, and that it is now 10% faster than in August 2024 with the launch of the latest version 139 (still in tests, in the development channel).
Google says that these improvements have been possible because the Chrome team works on all the main representation routes’ of the browser, referring to the fundamental mechanisms that convert the nuts and code screws for a website on a visible website in Chrome.
With that work that occurs more quickly on multiple fronts, web pages are seen that are represented in the browser a little faster, and should act more forcefully in general.
Clearly, however, the performance mileage depends not only on the browser, but on many factors (including any given website and how it is implemented, together with the PC specification and its current general workload).
Analysis: faster than ever, but some RAM concerns remain
There is a little technical detail provided in terms of the exact adjustments that Google has applied here, but to summarize, they include optimizations related to memory, a better use of caches and work in the refining of data structures.
Fortunately, simple non -programmers do not need to know those ins and outs. The simple conclusion is that, as mentioned, Chrome is now 10% faster, at least depending on this comparative evaluation career.
This is the last of a series of impulse for Chrome, since Google showed us how quickly his browser was at the same time at the same time last year, as Neowin pointed out.
The comparative evaluation tool used, the speedometer, is a respected set of tests for web browsers, generally recognized to reflect a real world navigation experience with a masking degree of precision. However, what we do not see here are 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 rapid scan of recent independent tests with a speedometer suggests that Chrome is not lazy, and it seems that it currently has the edge (without word game) on other browsers.
Google seems to be doing a good job in the performance front, then, despite Chrome’s reputation as Ram Hog, a problem that has tried to address. However, there have been improvements in terms of simplifying the use of memory with Chrome in the most recent past, and in general, Google’s browser seems quite Japanese these days.
That said, there are concerns about winds against performance related to RAM. The amount of this is due to contaminated perceptions is debatable, but the complaints certainly persist in several online forums that Chrome is not doing so well here, and it is overwhelmed with their demands in the system, particularly with a low range PC that are not well equipped in the department of RAM.
There are also more in web browsers than speed, and one of the most thorny problems for Chrome is a trustworthy, or rather the lack of this, with respect to Google ‘spy’ to its users, which is a common topic in terms of levels level levels online. It is not that Google is alone in terms of technological giants in this regard, far from it.