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Brand new core duo 24" iMac right here. Our newest hire is on it daily. Zero problems with Firefox. Works just like on Linux. Safari on the other hand is a pain with JS and RTE's.
When the problems start cropping up? did you install any plugins/extensions prior to the problems? in any case, try deleting the plist file located in ~/Library/Preferences/org.mozilla.firefox.plist and see if the issues go away.
One thing could be Google Reader. I've noticed that after I have Reader up with a lot of unread items that I need to reboot Firefox to get it to be responsive again.
If there were Greasemonkey setup for Camino, I'd happily AppZap Firefox, because right now, Firefox for Mac blows. On Windows, I love it. Just not on a Mac.
I have to force a quit and then .. all is ok for a while. I will add that it does take a while for it to start acting up.
I'm on a MacBook, Core Duo 2Ghz w/ 2GB RAM
Some of them have been:
- Watching video (YouTube for example) puts the CPU to 100%
- Text entry / tab switching is sometimes unresponsive for a couple seconds (in fact I see delays as I write this comment)
I haven't really experienced partial page loads or anything like that.
This is all on 2.0.0.4.
I've recently given up on Firefox on Vista, and grudgingly swapped back to IE7. I was just too damn flakey. I would regularly (like clockwork) freeze up for 20 seconds or so about 10 seconds after loading a new instance. So: open a new window, start browsing, FREEZE, wait wait, ok.
This is after fresh installs of Vista and Firefox. Same thing doesn't happen under XP, but in general I find the 2.0 branch of Firefox to have some nasty quirks.
http://www.macfixit.com/article.php?story=20070...
It may be a 10.4.10/ Airport/ WPA issue.
I am personally having this issue (Airport using WPA2), and I primarily use Safari, fwiw. No problems prior to the 10.4.10 update. I'm hoping there'll be an Airport update to fix this sooner rather than later.
scoble my firefox is freezing up like there no torrow and its pissing me off
;-)
My wife on the other hand prefers Firefox because she is a switcher (thank God). However, she has these problems constantly on a very clean 6-month old Macbook. I purposely keep her machine free of all the Firefox and Mac extensions to make sure she doesn't have any problems, however, Firefox constantly freezes for some unknown reason (and I can usually troubleshoot most Mac issues).
I was also surprised because I hadn't heard of these problems, and so many swear by Firefox (who seem to be the same people who have problems with Safari).
Anyway, I'm glad you posted this, because I'd love to find some answers as to what the deal is with Firefox on the Mac. It doesn't act like a Mac ap (nor does it look like one).
Have you tried Camino? it's stripped down and made for Mac. It is extremely reliable, though I only use it when I run into rare problems with Safari. But it's stripped nature keeps me from using it all the time. It's Mozilla code, so I don't understand why they didn't make it compatible with the Firefox extension base. But maybe that's the problem with Firefox. As far as I can tell, many Firefox extensions seem to be cross-platform.
Firefox regularly locks up on my Mac Mini. And I mean, routinely, without much heavy pounding.
For example, I can come back and wake up the Mini from an overnight slumber by shaking the mouse and Firefox will sit there, locked up tight as a drum.
Clicking on the Firefox icon on the dock does ZIP and my only recourse is to 'force quit' Firefox.
Very annoying, to say the least.
Safari - even v3.0 beta lacks some of the tiny knick nacks that are core to my browsing (#1 - cmd+enter doesn't put a .com on the address!)
Camino - Definitely considered a viable option, but lack of plugins definitely leaves me the creek without an oar.
Opera - I need to spend more time learning this browser, but it's still pretty slow for me.
I ran into this with Greasemonkey some time ago. It was nice, but when pages where taking 10s of seconds to load with a bunch of CPU taken up, I decided to uninstall it, and things went back to snappy for me.
But I've installed it on other computers, and they never have the problems that I've seen.
YMMV
Also for some reason the 2.0.0.4 upgrade doesn't seem to get installed. I have noticed the upgrade dialog quite a few times in the past couple of weeks, but the upgrade has always failed up to this point.
Fix it mozilla!
For something that is meant to replace IE its not good.
http://terrychay.com/blog/article/back-to-safar...
I talked to Dru Nelson on it and he seems to think that there is something that cropped up in Firefox 2 or a patch release that causes the event loop to hang for a bit on Macs. Basically after a while, you click on a link and you just sit there with a beach ball for 6 seconds before it unlocks and loads a page.
http://www.xxeo.com/archives/2007/06/08/whats-u...
On windows, Firefox seems to leak a lot and then crash. So I guess it’s choose your poison.
I better go apologize and tell her it wasn't her fault and then go try Camino or something else out now.
but I sure was glad that I wasn't on Safari when the keyboard shortcut didn't work for a few days
http://groups.google.com/group/Google-Labs-Read...
"you want me to do what? use the mouse to go to the next article?"
I use Camino for almost all of my browsing because of this, and only use firefox when I need to use firebug. As soon as it's fixed I'd gladly go back to using FF since I love the plugins.
Hope this helps.
~Cathyrn Hrudicka, Chief Imagination Officer
Creative Sage(tm)
http://www.beatnikpad.com/archives/2007/03/29/f...
Maybe it's something with 2.0.0.4?
Once every day or two Firefox seems to lock up or crash spontaneously.
I'm 99% sure the issue is 10.4.10.
http://weather.unisys.com/satellite/sat_wv_east...
Always gives my Powerbook fits. Firefox under Linux handles it better, but I notice a lot of CPU going on while it does so.
There is a very longstanding performance bug/issue having to do with GIF handling, although I think it can extend to other file formats involving 8-bit color palets or something... I reported the problem years ago (when it was still Mozilla) and I still get an update on it every now and then. This seems to be an example of code that can only be fixed in one area by breaking something in another.
I also noticed that after the last update from Apple my Powerbook stopped playing certain WMA files... but then two days and a few boots later they started working again. I'd say something funny is going on with rendering in general on Apple machines (possibly exacerbated by Firefox issues).
Maybe we've reached one of those points where all the ace coders are rushing to get the next release out leaving all the maintenance issues to the apprentices. I kinda wish I'd held off on that last update, now that I've thought of that.
Safari 3 is blazing fast. I live on Google Reader all day long and it's smoking fast. I've left Firefox 2 behind because it's just too slow and painful on my Macs these days. Seems like it recently slowed to a crawl, but rather than debug it, I fell in love with Safari 3 Beta.
*hides head in shame*
Anyhow, like I said, glad I'm not the only one experiencing this.
I have problems with Camino not loading the Reader interface properly. Not sure what's up with that...
http://www.apple.com/safari/download/
A little collaboration to find the common element makes finding the bug (and a fix) 1000X better.
May also want to try "Minefield" aka Firefox 3.0 alpha and see if you encounter the same problem. While still alpha quality (be careful) it may give you an idea if the problem has already been fixed in the next release.
Macs are the problem
Apple=shit
FF starts up slower than Safari and Camino but otherwise I can't recognise any of the problems discussed.
An Intel-issue (wonders the chip-analphabet)?
(I can tell you some curious stories about the Finder and iTunes on the iMac - both have become seriously slo-o-o-o-ow after 10.4.9 but the endless kernel panics the machine experienced for almost a year disappeared without a trace - but that's another story)
is the post title correct? did you switch to a Mac?
My Mac isn't here yet (still waiting) but I can tell you that under Vista Firefox is a constant battle, some days its fine, other days it will freeze up constantly. I've even gone as far as having Task Manager open all the time so I can deal with it immediately; and thank god for session restore :-)
I love Firefox but seriously, every new version gets worse and worse. Eventually someone out there is going to build a FF alternative that natively supports FF plugins and millions will make the switch because of these issues; most ppl only stick to FF because of the addons (in my experience anyway).
If I need to open 5 tabs with important data and ensure I won't accidentally close it and can get back to it if I do, I use Firefox. I hate it when Safari "unexpectedly quits" and takes 30 minutes of web research with it. If I run anything with flash or javascript, Firefox has proved more reliable for me. Safari, on the other hand, blasts past Firefox on Google Reader and everyday surfing. I've never experienced the DAMN SLOWNESS of which you speak ;-).
I think Apple finally nailed it.
I wonder if all the f***ing Flash ads everywhere might be part of the problem. FF 2 for XP "sticks" pretty often when you try to leave a tab with flash content running.
I think Safari for Windows may prove to a Good Idea, after all-- but I'd still like to FF fixed up.
You've likely gotten a truckload of comments -- I'll add mine here. I'm a Google Reader fanatic and a browser snob (of a sort). Very particular about what I use.
Firefox leaks memory like no tomorrow. I'm off of it on the Mac, though I love it on the PC.
For the Mac, I use the latest nightly build of WebKit for my general browsing and use Camino for Gmail, Docs, Calendar and Reader. The Google Metaverse.
I've found WebKit to be VERY fast running JavaScript -- almost as fast as Camino, which beats every other browser insofar as performance for JavaScript-based "Web 2.0" apps on the Mac.
Use Camino for your Google apps -- you'll be VERY happy. Gmail takes a bit to load the first message composition window, but thereafter is quick.
While Safari/WebKit 3.0 seemed to be fast with Google Apps, and GReader in particular, there are a number of quirks which make it unusable for me. One is that if you keep using "N" to move down through your posts, once you get to a post beyond the visual range of your window (vertically), Safari won't start scrolling the main GReader window. BAD.
Oh, and if using Safari, be sure to download Inquisitor. The ability to do previews of searches and search shortcuts is AMAZING. A must have for performance.
Daniel
Opera Software
So, so long, Firefox!! A sad end to what started out as a passionate love affair...
FYI: All this with a plain-jane 2.0.0.4--no extensions, no themes added.
Oh, and about the fonts in Firefox 2.0? Safari generates much more readable web pages!
forever on certain pages like an e-commerce site I regularly update.
I have to use Safari for this now. I'm not sure what's causing this.
I'm using an Macpro Quad 2.6 Machine running OS X 10.4.10.
Jan
I'm not sure why you're experiencing slowness with Safari. On my PowerBook G4 (no MacBook here yet), Google Reader flat-out screams in Safari. The only reasons Safari isn't MY browser of preference is that are still some sites it won't load or at least load properly that Firefox handles fine and there are two plugins I rely on in Firefox for site development that have no equivalent in Safari.
For everyday browsing experience, Safari seems faster and superior in many other ways to Firefox.
(BTW, anecdotal evidence suggests that when Firefox starts misbehaving, restarting it will often recover. I suspect they've got one or more nasty memory leaks in that sucker.)
Dan
I disabled all my extensions, still got the same problem. Firefox subjects everything on my PC to the occasional (but far too frequent) freeze when it's open - except if it's open on a blank page and nothing else, which is no good is it. When I shut down Fox, or close all pages on it but leave it open, everything else on my PC starts working again.
It's been driving me nuts. If I can get my fave Greasemonkey scripts to work on Opera (I can't yet), I'm giving up and switching to Opera. I've already had enough of unresponsive script problems, and increasing dom.max_script_run_time didn't help (I think I narrowed it down to a recent extension).
Point is, once upon a time Fox was a speedy, useful tool. Now...?
Pingback from Samiq Bits on my previous post & why do you have to hate every single approach from Microsoft.
The good news is that, on my XP system at least, I've found that reverting to version 2.0.0.2 has done the trick, see http://www.consumingexperience.com/2007/07/fire..., so I'm now sticking to that despite the security issues. I'd be interested to know if Mac users who try reverting to 2.0.0.2 also find relief.
I may try 2.0.0.5 when it's officially released to see if it's better, but as you say it now seems to be a question of waiting for Opera to catch up on extensions.
I never took to Opera fully because the cookie control wasn't as good or as easy as I'd like - if they'd sorted that out early on I might never have tried Fox. Opera's improved on the cookie front since, but I'd still want to be able to batch delete selected cookies e.g. through checkboxes or even Shift or Ctrl-clicking to select them (it's too painful doing it individually), before I'd be willing to fully switch to Opera.
If only Firefox can reverse what now appears to be a slow but increasing slide towards IEdom.. (shudder).
i've removed the firefox folders from application support. the problem still happens. any thoughts on what i can do to stop it?
thanks.