![]() ![]() Though, I improved on that bit using Instapaper and Reeder, something to write about for another day, perhaps.). And writing requires a lot of reading which, in turn, requires a lot of open tabs in my browser window with around 40-50 tabs open at one ago for multiple articles that I am researching for or just freelancing-related articles that I am reading (I wasn’t good at tab-management even before I became a freelancer. That said, in the last few days, I have been using Chrome increasingly and it is largely owing to one Chrome extension that I can’t live without right now.Īfter beginning to freelance last week, I have been writing quite a bit every day. I also like the design aesthetic of Safari over Chrome (although, the new material design aesthetic of Chrome is better looking than before). Safari is not only faster and puts less stress on my Macbook’s battery, it’s cross-device tab-sync over iCloud is seamless. That’s why I moved to Safari when I got my Macbook Air last year. Just that, in all of this, the user experience that I liked Chrome for has been lost. Reports and experiments (mine included) have shown that Chrome leads to massive losses in battery life for the device it is being used on. No doubt, it is still the most open, supported and extensible browser out there. And worst of all, it has become a constant battery hog. Chrome’s tab-sync never works for me between my devices. Safari tab suspender software#A browser which took pride in its speed has become extremely slow and bloated, becoming more of a software platform than web-browser. But, over the years Chrome has fallen down the same ditch that it got us out of in 2008. It was blazing fast and incredibly light on your computer’s resources – a slap in the face of Firefox and other browsers which had become a bloated mess. The Chrome browser was web-browsing nirvana when it launched in 2008. I have no extensions installed in Safari.I was a bigtime Google Chrome user and fanboy till last year. ![]() That seems like something which might be possible to fix in Safari, which would be ideal, because the delay in opening a new tab is crazy-making. It happens on this website, Stack Overflow, Twitter, and everywhere else I've seen an HTML editor. I'm looking for the best way to report this as an issue to Apple, as it seems like a reproducible performance issue across all sites that use HTML editors. (I do a lot of online collaboration at my job.) I currently have about 60-70 tabs open, many of which contain open editors. The delays also seem to increase as I have more open tabs in my browser. If I first switch to a different open tab, one without an edit control open, pressing Cmd+T makes a tab appear instantly. While this happens, Safari shows the beachball/SPOD cursor. ![]() ![]() I've noticed a problem with Safari (version 11.0.2 on High Sierra, but also on earlier versions) where it is very slow to open new tabs, but only when I'm on a page that has a text editing control open.įor example, on this page on Apple Support Communities, where there's a rich text editor, pressing Cmd+T takes about 10 seconds to open. ![]()
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