By Willow (willowashmaple.sbs, formerly of willowashmaple.xyz)
June 12, 2024 (Updated Sept. 8, 2024)
Edit (Sept. 2, 2024): There are several conflicting theories out there as to how to make Firefox run faster. I have experimented with disabling the cache for a couple of months, but the improvement gained by this still fell far short of the speed of Chromium-based browsers at startup. So I had reactivated the cache. Furthermore, the performance of Firefox-based browsers seem to be affected a lot by the add-ons. I experimented with LibreWolf and Tor browsers, without add-ons, and the performance speed is quite comparable to Chromium-based browsers. But of course, people like add-ons. They provide useful functions.
Recently, I came across a new Firefox-based browser called Zen. Now this browser starts up fast, and runs fast even with all the add-ons. Currently Zen is only available for Linux desktop (AppImage or zero-install), Windows, and MacOS. It supports Firefox sync and add-ons just like Floorp and Midori.
=> Zen Browser
As you may already know, nearly all the web browsers today are based on Chromium, an open-source project sponsored by Google and is the foundation for the popular Google Chrome browser.
In addition to Google Chrome and Chromium, popular browsers such as Opera, Brave, Vivaldi, and Edge are all based on this. This creates a virtual monopoly in the web browser marketplace.
Mozilla Firefox is the long-run competitor to Chrome and other browsers that came before, such as the Microsoft Internet Explorer. In fact, Firefox is a continuation of the good old Netscape Navigator, which in turn was based on Mozaic.
One of the reasons why Firefox is not as popular is a common complaint about it: Simply put, Firefox is perceived to be the "slow" browser.
The reason for this is that it takes a bit longer for Firefox to start up and be ready to load the first web page. But as I experimented with it (note: the desktop Firefox browser, running on Debian Linux), I was able to substantially improve the startup performance by doing these two things:
Edit: If you cannot modify your DNS settings, use the Ghostery add-on. It does not slow down Firefox like most other ad blockers. Ghostery is both an ad blocker and anti-tracker, so you can uninstall the Privacy Badger add-on and lessen the resource usage.
=> ControlD FreeDNS (choose the "Ads & Tracking") | NextDNS (free for up to 300,000 DNS inquiries per calendar month, which should be enough for an individual user with one device.)
=> UnGoogled Chromium binary downloads
=> Floorp
=> Midori for desktop | Midori for Android
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