TSGL: Is IE7 a RAM gobbler?
jonpan
jonpan at onlinehome.de
Wed Feb 7 10:20:22 EST 2007
Hi Michael,
Can you check that you really find IE in that chain you mention? Even
through Accessories I can't find IE in System Tools. Other listers with XP
Pro SP2?
Thanks.
John
Od/G
----- Original Message -----
From: "Michael Sweeden" <michaelsweeden at comcast.net>
To: "'Tech Support Guy Mailing List'" <list at tsgserver.com>
Sent: Wednesday, February 07, 2007 2:27 AM
Subject: Re: TSGL: Is IE7 a RAM gobbler?
Timely enough, there is a blurb on page 92 of the latest PC World Magazine
warning about add-ons, and showing that using some of the add-ons reviewed
in the magazine can add, according to the chart, 20MB of RAM overhead to IE.
So apparently the web page, the running Active-X controls, and the add-ins
can all have an impact on RAM usage. It also mentions how to start up IE
with no add-ons: Start>All Programs>System Tools>Internet Explorer (No
Addons).
Michael
-----Original Message-----
From: list-bounces at tsgserver.com [mailto:list-bounces at tsgserver.com] On
Behalf Of H Davis
Sent: Tuesday, February 06, 2007 8:05 PM
To: Tech Support Guy Mailing List
Subject: Re: TSGL: Is IE7 a RAM gobbler?
Ed,
A few posts back Don mentioned that when he opened a tab with MSN search
it added a lot of memory usage to Maxithon (IE based). I suspect that IE
7 has a default search built in that is used if you enter a search term
in the address bar or elsewhere(?). I don't have IE 7 installed. Is it
possible that each time you open another tab, another copy of whatever
IE 7 needs for this "feature" is loaded? There might be a way to turn
off the default search behavior or at least change it to another engine
as a test.
HTH
H Davis
Ian R-P wrote:
> I did another test, http://www.whatismyip.org thats one simple line of
> coding which is whatever your ip is. IE7 registering at 13,000k without
cpu
> usage and as soon as i went to anything like google, yahoo, digg....any
big
> websites, it shoots right back up to 45,000k and cpu usage
>
> On 2/7/07, Don Penlington <deepend at tpg.com.au> wrote:
>
>> Ian wrote:
>>
>>> i just opened ie let it sit for 2 minutes on
>>> www.yahoo.com only that one tab open and it's sitting at 45,880k and
>>>
>> using
>>
>>> 35-45% cpu use.>>
>>>
>> And Russ wrote:
>>
>> <<I have IE7 open with 5 tabs (5 separate web pages). It is consuming
>> 4008k,
>>
>>> about 4 MB memory.>>
>>>
>> I don't know if this is any help, but I have Maxthon which is an IE-based
>> browser using IE6. (I've no wish to update to IE7 yet).
>>
>> When I open 4 web pages, Maxthon sits on about 4500-4800 Kb of memory and
>> zero CPU usage. If I open MSN search page as a 5th tab, memory usage
>> shoots
>> up to 12000-14000Kb and remains there. CPU usage remains on zero, after
>> jumping momentarily to 2%. When I close MSN, memory usage goes back to
>> 4500-4800Kb.
>>
>> All pages are static--ie fully loaded but lying idle.
>>
>> It seems therefore that the web site you have open may well affect the
>> amount of memory consumed quite drastically.
>>
>> I've often thought that some sites seem to need a lot more browser/CPU
>> grunt than others, but until sparked by curiosity after reading your
>> emails, I'd never before bothered to investigate. I've no idea why this
>> should be.
>> Ian--are you certain the pages are fully loaded? Perhaps you'd suspect it
>> with sites like Yahoo--who are probably using push technology which would
>> create a lot of unseen firewall activity. This, in turn, would be
>> communicating with the browser, thus it shows up as browser usage.
>> Maybe---I'm just guessing.
>>
>> If all sites, regardless of color or creed, are consuming inordinate
>> amounts of memory or CPU resources, then there are probably deeper
>> underlying issues on the individual computer. (eg Nortons security
suites
>> would be a primary suspect).
>>
>> I don't know whether the various types of internet connection would have
>> any bearing on this subject.
>>
>> To answer Ed's original query, nothing I've read indicates anything
>> inherent in IE7 by which might be regarded as a resource hog.
>>
>> Don Penlington
>>
>>
>> From the Beach at Surfers Paradise in sunny Queensland.
>> Computer tutorials, local scenery, and other things at my website:
>> http://users.tpg.com.au/deepend/index1.html
>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
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>> http://www.tsgserver.com/list/
>>
>>
>
>
>
>
--
H Davis hdavis1 at gmail.com
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