- Jun 30, 2004
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For many months, I had noticed an annoying problem with Windows 10. I had built my systems to be extremelly fast, even with a dated processor and chipset. I often make a lot of web-queries, seeking answers to all sorts of questions and looking for all kinds of information. For some things more than others, I'm inclined to leave the web-pages open until I'm sure I won't return to them anymore regarding the reasons I opened them in the first place. I might have about ten or more tabs open on my web-browser over more than a day's time. Parallel to this practice, the responsiveness of Windows would deteriorate. If I had just booted the computer to a fresh desktop, clicking the "Start" button would raise its menu in less than a second's time. But after a day's worth of use, you could count three seconds. And the same behavior would manifest in the responsiveness of open software. Of course, these sorts of delayed responses lead to mistakes and other trouble as a user navigates menus and title bars.
I began to look for reasons I could control: miscreant software, drivers, utilities I run perpetually (my RAM caching software, for instance). Nothing I could do would resolve the behavior, other than closing all my files and software, then rebooting for a fresh start.
I eventually discovered that the number of tabs I kept open in EDGE had something to do with the degraded responsiveness over time. I experimented and confirmed it.
Then, a friend who is just a "mainstreamer" told me he'd actually read about this flaw of Windows (and EDGE) which was never fixed by MS.
I have used alternative web-browsers before. I only inclined toward Explorer and EDGE because they're provided with Windows and it seemed simpler to stick with them. But I use Chrome on my Android tablets; I've used Firefox and other options before.
I think I"m at a crossroads here. Can anyone recommend a web-browser that doesn't exhibit the behavior I've described with the entire OS -- slowing it down over time?
I began to look for reasons I could control: miscreant software, drivers, utilities I run perpetually (my RAM caching software, for instance). Nothing I could do would resolve the behavior, other than closing all my files and software, then rebooting for a fresh start.
I eventually discovered that the number of tabs I kept open in EDGE had something to do with the degraded responsiveness over time. I experimented and confirmed it.
Then, a friend who is just a "mainstreamer" told me he'd actually read about this flaw of Windows (and EDGE) which was never fixed by MS.
I have used alternative web-browsers before. I only inclined toward Explorer and EDGE because they're provided with Windows and it seemed simpler to stick with them. But I use Chrome on my Android tablets; I've used Firefox and other options before.
I think I"m at a crossroads here. Can anyone recommend a web-browser that doesn't exhibit the behavior I've described with the entire OS -- slowing it down over time?