- Oct 25, 1999
- 29,547
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:'( I now feel my life is "less"...
How can I join this Power Surfer club?
By stop being so honest and pretend that you are actually using 300 tabs open (like I do right now).

:'( I now feel my life is "less"...
How can I join this Power Surfer club?
LOL, you made me laugh ! I don't know, follow multiple technical/ raging threads here at Anands, follow current tech news on Google, maybe search for new meal or food ideas and or recipes, the local weather, your web email, ESPN , how to fix your furnace, leaking shower drain, or garage door?:'( I now feel my life is "less"...
How can I join this Power Surfer club?
2. Switching tabs is not very CPU intensive. However I don't know which browsers if any support heavy multithreading in the first place.
5. None.
To people who have lots of tabs open: Why not just have multiple firefox instances with a limited number of tabs each? I would find it incredibly annoying to use the drop down list for switching tabs, especially when it gets so full that you need to scroll down. Having multiple instances would also make it easier to manage groups of tabs
I don't know how you open your tabs but I tend to use chromes open all feature for daily read sites.
If you open on mass like me then lots of cores also help to smooth it out.
I also use, Adblock plus and Noscript with the latest firefox release.
Having enough memory is definitely important, but what is more important is having a browser that understands how to isolate tabs from one another.
... So yeah, if you want to have a ton of tabs open, just use Chrome.
LOL, you made me laugh ! I don't know, follow multiple technical/ raging threads here at Anands, follow current tech news on Google, maybe search for new meal or food ideas and or recipes, the local weather, your web email, ESPN , how to fix your furnace, leaking shower drain, or garage door?
It's not to hard to open many browser instances, if you let the organ between your ears flex it's 'muscle'. !
There are few different scenarios that determine whether the HT is worth going for: ...
If you're opening a lot of tabs at once then you want a lot of threads. And an SSD. Processor speed and RAM size are not that important.... as long as you have enough RAM. 100 tabs of your typical websites will only consume 1-2GB.
Ok, I get it now... "Power Surfing" = unemployed
To people who have lots of tabs open: Why not just have multiple firefox instances with a limited number of tabs each? I would find it incredibly annoying to use the drop down list for switching tabs, especially when it gets so full that you need to scroll down. Having multiple instances would also make it easier to manage groups of tabs
Reload ALL TABS followed by router explosion...
So can you have multi-rows of Tabs in Chrome? Is there a Tab Mix Plus equivalent? Is the equivalent of Session Manager as good?
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That's a deal breaker for me. Once you've utilised multi rows you can't go back.No, you can't have multiple rows of tabs in Chrome.
That's a deal breaker for me. Once you've utilised multi rows you can't go back.
But aside from the Firefox/Chrome debate, anything more on the other issues re hardware/config factors? Thanks
No, you can't have multiple rows of tabs in Chrome. You can set it so that the tabs are listed along the left side of the page in a column though. You can fit A LOT of tabs in a vertical list without losing the titles (obviously). You also get a chance to make use of some otherwise underutilized screen space.
Did you read my post? It has something better than multiple rows.
I'm going to describe my girlfriend's browsing habits. They are amazing and I've never seen anything like them. She has sometimes 2-300 tabs open in Chrome in multiple windows.
But anyway, I'm not even sure why this has become a browser preference discussion because the original query has nothing to do with browser preference and it would be much more useful if it returned on point.
Having enough memory is definitely important, but what is more important is having a browser that understands how to isolate tabs from one another.
Please refer back to my second post in the thread as to why is has to be a browser preference discussion.
So, if you want to handle more tabs faster, switch to Chrome and buy a ton of memory.
Is that what happened to the guy in your avatar?
I think ram is important for tabs
Got to add my 2 cents. i had the same peoblem with 100-300 tabs- I run a 3930k, m4 SSD, 1200W antex, 32gb samsung ram - I had an old Quadro card (128 mb - FX 1200) and it was lagging like mad. Changed the card - GEforce 550t- = no more lag. Someone said the RAM, someone said CPU and another said GPU - you guys are all right, but if you have a crappy GPU it will NOT matter how much RAM you have or your CPU. I OC'd mine to 4.7 and it still lagged. And yes 8-12gb ram is about all anyone needs for day to day stuff, 16gb would be ideal. I dont think I have ever gone beyond that unless I have never seen it. As I type this I have 300 tabs, adobe audition, adobe photoshop, a few p2p programs, chat, 2 media players, 3 other browsers with 10 tabs each, 2 monitors, word, some other bits and pieces and I am at 12.5 GB RAM and 6% CPU.