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#32
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On 11/21/2013 9:51 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote:
Just stopwatched the laptop ...12 seconds from hitting the power on key on my laptop until it completes the boot process. And I was wrong...it does make a call to the server for its backup folder and my documents folder and my connected SDXC card. It's the SSD drive that makes it that fast. When the time comes that I need a new computer, I am definitely going to look for a hard disk-less model. I'll get one with the SSD drive an use "The Cloud" for mass storage, if needed. |
#33
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posted to rec.boats
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On 11/21/13, 10:29 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 11/21/2013 9:51 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: Just stopwatched the laptop ...12 seconds from hitting the power on key on my laptop until it completes the boot process. And I was wrong...it does make a call to the server for its backup folder and my documents folder and my connected SDXC card. It's the SSD drive that makes it that fast. When the time comes that I need a new computer, I am definitely going to look for a hard disk-less model. I'll get one with the SSD drive an use "The Cloud" for mass storage, if needed. My iMac desktop comes off of AppleCare soon, so I am thinking of selling it and getting a new iMac in 2014, one with only an SSD. I have a ton of software on my current iMac, and am only using 190 GBs of a 1000 GBs drive, so I think a 500 GBs SSD will be more than sufficient. I keep all my text, data, music and movie files on my server, and on a separate "critical stuff" backup drive, and I keep some of the music in "the cloud." -- Religion: together we can find the cure. |
#34
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posted to rec.boats
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On 11/21/2013 9:51 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote:
On 11/21/13, 9:43 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 11/21/2013 8:45 AM, John H wrote: On Thu, 21 Nov 2013 08:33:07 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 11/21/2013 7:13 AM, John H wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 17:44:26 -0500, wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 23:20:36 +0100, Stig Arne Bye wrote: John H wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 15:55:08 -0500, wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 15:42:58 -0500, John H wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 10:23:27 -0500, Hankİ wrote: Has anyone updated to IE11. Any comments or feedback? I'm still using XP. The latest I can use if IE8. Another good reason to run Firefox. IE8 will not open a lot of things but Firefox will. (Bill Gates trying to sell more product) I've had Firefox run into problems opening Microsoft stuff. But I like Firefox. Never had any problems with it, although it is slow to open compared to IE8. John H. -- Hope you're having a great day! I do also have one computer running XP SP3 with multiple browsers installed, and by using a stop watch, I measured and compared the time to open IE and Firefox after clicking the shortcut. After doing this test 5 times for each browser, I got the following results: - IE (version 8.0) opened in 1.37 seconds in average. - Firefox (version 25.0.1) opened in 3.16 seconds in average. A lot of IE is actually resident in Windoze. That would help explain it. I've learned patience when it comes to Firefox. John H. -- Hope you're having a great day! The first time after a reboot both Firefox and IE are slow to open on both of my computers (meaning four or five seconds) but after that they open fairly fast ... like a second or two. As previously mentioned, I don't use IE as a browser, but I just tried it for comparison. Doesn't seem to be any faster than Firefox. My computers are both laptops, one running Vista Home Premium (64 bit) and the other Win 7 Home Edition or something like that ... also 64 bit. When I bought them I was advised by a computer geek to make sure they had at least 4GB of RAM memory and a faster CPU (forget what speed they are). Both work fine, although Vista takes forever and a day to initially boot up. Once it's fully booted however it seems just as fast as Win 7. I also have an older XP laptop that has both IE and Firefox. It is slow as molasses compared to the Vista or Win 7 laptops. I called the builder of my computer yesterday about upgrading from XP. When mine was built, Vista was out. He told me to stick with XP, and that he'd upgrade it when a decent version came out. He offered to put Win 7 on it if I would bring it in. No charge...and it's not even an Apple! John H. -- Hope you're having a great day! Depending on your amount of RAM and CPU clock speed, skipping over Vista probably made sense. It's a resource hog. I was told however that most of the problems associated with Vista were caused by insufficient RAM and relatively slow CPUs ... and ... most were 32 bit machines. The computer geek that advised me as to minimum memory and CPU speed to run Vista was correct, IMO. Other than being slow to initially boot, I have absolutely no complaints with the Vista laptop. It's fast, is stable and has been free of crashes. I used it at the guitar shop for four years and used the Win 7 computer at home. Now that I am no longer involved much in the shop, I brought the Vista laptop home and it sat for a long time, unused. Then I realized it has a much bigger screen than the Win 7 computer, so I switched over to it. I just read some of the stuff printed on the stickers on it. Apparently it is an HP model that was designed primarily for multimedia applications. It has more memory and a faster CPU. It runs fine, lasts a long time. :-) Just stopwatched the laptop ...12 seconds from hitting the power on key on my laptop until it completes the boot process. And I was wrong...it does make a call to the server for its backup folder and my documents folder and my connected SDXC card. It's the SSD drive that makes it that fast. In windows land we call what you described, waking up from sleep mode. -- Americans deserve better. |
#35
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posted to rec.boats
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On 11/21/2013 11:18 AM, Hankİ wrote:
On 11/21/2013 9:51 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: On 11/21/13, 9:43 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 11/21/2013 8:45 AM, John H wrote: On Thu, 21 Nov 2013 08:33:07 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 11/21/2013 7:13 AM, John H wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 17:44:26 -0500, wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 23:20:36 +0100, Stig Arne Bye wrote: John H wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 15:55:08 -0500, wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 15:42:58 -0500, John H wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 10:23:27 -0500, Hankİ wrote: Has anyone updated to IE11. Any comments or feedback? I'm still using XP. The latest I can use if IE8. Another good reason to run Firefox. IE8 will not open a lot of things but Firefox will. (Bill Gates trying to sell more product) I've had Firefox run into problems opening Microsoft stuff. But I like Firefox. Never had any problems with it, although it is slow to open compared to IE8. John H. -- Hope you're having a great day! I do also have one computer running XP SP3 with multiple browsers installed, and by using a stop watch, I measured and compared the time to open IE and Firefox after clicking the shortcut. After doing this test 5 times for each browser, I got the following results: - IE (version 8.0) opened in 1.37 seconds in average. - Firefox (version 25.0.1) opened in 3.16 seconds in average. A lot of IE is actually resident in Windoze. That would help explain it. I've learned patience when it comes to Firefox. John H. -- Hope you're having a great day! The first time after a reboot both Firefox and IE are slow to open on both of my computers (meaning four or five seconds) but after that they open fairly fast ... like a second or two. As previously mentioned, I don't use IE as a browser, but I just tried it for comparison. Doesn't seem to be any faster than Firefox. My computers are both laptops, one running Vista Home Premium (64 bit) and the other Win 7 Home Edition or something like that ... also 64 bit. When I bought them I was advised by a computer geek to make sure they had at least 4GB of RAM memory and a faster CPU (forget what speed they are). Both work fine, although Vista takes forever and a day to initially boot up. Once it's fully booted however it seems just as fast as Win 7. I also have an older XP laptop that has both IE and Firefox. It is slow as molasses compared to the Vista or Win 7 laptops. I called the builder of my computer yesterday about upgrading from XP. When mine was built, Vista was out. He told me to stick with XP, and that he'd upgrade it when a decent version came out. He offered to put Win 7 on it if I would bring it in. No charge...and it's not even an Apple! John H. -- Hope you're having a great day! Depending on your amount of RAM and CPU clock speed, skipping over Vista probably made sense. It's a resource hog. I was told however that most of the problems associated with Vista were caused by insufficient RAM and relatively slow CPUs ... and ... most were 32 bit machines. The computer geek that advised me as to minimum memory and CPU speed to run Vista was correct, IMO. Other than being slow to initially boot, I have absolutely no complaints with the Vista laptop. It's fast, is stable and has been free of crashes. I used it at the guitar shop for four years and used the Win 7 computer at home. Now that I am no longer involved much in the shop, I brought the Vista laptop home and it sat for a long time, unused. Then I realized it has a much bigger screen than the Win 7 computer, so I switched over to it. I just read some of the stuff printed on the stickers on it. Apparently it is an HP model that was designed primarily for multimedia applications. It has more memory and a faster CPU. It runs fine, lasts a long time. :-) Just stopwatched the laptop ...12 seconds from hitting the power on key on my laptop until it completes the boot process. And I was wrong...it does make a call to the server for its backup folder and my documents folder and my connected SDXC card. It's the SSD drive that makes it that fast. In windows land we call what you described, waking up from sleep mode. Just wondering if anybody here does anything on their machine that makes that few extra seconds matter? Also note, I have been running win 7 premium on this laptop since basically win 7 came out mainstream.... Don't ever remember one "crash" that wasn't browser related, Flash, or similar... No "Windoze" here ![]() |
#36
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posted to rec.boats
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On 11/21/13, 11:30 AM, KC wrote:
On 11/21/2013 11:18 AM, Hankİ wrote: On 11/21/2013 9:51 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: On 11/21/13, 9:43 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 11/21/2013 8:45 AM, John H wrote: On Thu, 21 Nov 2013 08:33:07 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 11/21/2013 7:13 AM, John H wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 17:44:26 -0500, wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 23:20:36 +0100, Stig Arne Bye wrote: John H wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 15:55:08 -0500, wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 15:42:58 -0500, John H wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 10:23:27 -0500, Hankİ wrote: Has anyone updated to IE11. Any comments or feedback? I'm still using XP. The latest I can use if IE8. Another good reason to run Firefox. IE8 will not open a lot of things but Firefox will. (Bill Gates trying to sell more product) I've had Firefox run into problems opening Microsoft stuff. But I like Firefox. Never had any problems with it, although it is slow to open compared to IE8. John H. -- Hope you're having a great day! I do also have one computer running XP SP3 with multiple browsers installed, and by using a stop watch, I measured and compared the time to open IE and Firefox after clicking the shortcut. After doing this test 5 times for each browser, I got the following results: - IE (version 8.0) opened in 1.37 seconds in average. - Firefox (version 25.0.1) opened in 3.16 seconds in average. A lot of IE is actually resident in Windoze. That would help explain it. I've learned patience when it comes to Firefox. John H. -- Hope you're having a great day! The first time after a reboot both Firefox and IE are slow to open on both of my computers (meaning four or five seconds) but after that they open fairly fast ... like a second or two. As previously mentioned, I don't use IE as a browser, but I just tried it for comparison. Doesn't seem to be any faster than Firefox. My computers are both laptops, one running Vista Home Premium (64 bit) and the other Win 7 Home Edition or something like that ... also 64 bit. When I bought them I was advised by a computer geek to make sure they had at least 4GB of RAM memory and a faster CPU (forget what speed they are). Both work fine, although Vista takes forever and a day to initially boot up. Once it's fully booted however it seems just as fast as Win 7. I also have an older XP laptop that has both IE and Firefox. It is slow as molasses compared to the Vista or Win 7 laptops. I called the builder of my computer yesterday about upgrading from XP. When mine was built, Vista was out. He told me to stick with XP, and that he'd upgrade it when a decent version came out. He offered to put Win 7 on it if I would bring it in. No charge...and it's not even an Apple! John H. -- Hope you're having a great day! Depending on your amount of RAM and CPU clock speed, skipping over Vista probably made sense. It's a resource hog. I was told however that most of the problems associated with Vista were caused by insufficient RAM and relatively slow CPUs ... and ... most were 32 bit machines. The computer geek that advised me as to minimum memory and CPU speed to run Vista was correct, IMO. Other than being slow to initially boot, I have absolutely no complaints with the Vista laptop. It's fast, is stable and has been free of crashes. I used it at the guitar shop for four years and used the Win 7 computer at home. Now that I am no longer involved much in the shop, I brought the Vista laptop home and it sat for a long time, unused. Then I realized it has a much bigger screen than the Win 7 computer, so I switched over to it. I just read some of the stuff printed on the stickers on it. Apparently it is an HP model that was designed primarily for multimedia applications. It has more memory and a faster CPU. It runs fine, lasts a long time. :-) Just stopwatched the laptop ...12 seconds from hitting the power on key on my laptop until it completes the boot process. And I was wrong...it does make a call to the server for its backup folder and my documents folder and my connected SDXC card. It's the SSD drive that makes it that fast. In windows land we call what you described, waking up from sleep mode. Just wondering if anybody here does anything on their machine that makes that few extra seconds matter? Also note, I have been running win 7 premium on this laptop since basically win 7 came out mainstream.... Don't ever remember one "crash" that wasn't browser related, Flash, or similar... No "Windoze" here ![]() Ahh. I see indirectly that our 7th grade jokester, FlaJim, doesn't know the difference on a computer between "sleep" mode and a power up from absolutely off. Well, of course. -- Religion: together we can find the cure. |
#37
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posted to rec.boats
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On Thu, 21 Nov 2013 11:30:58 -0500, KC wrote:
On 11/21/2013 11:18 AM, Hankİ wrote: On 11/21/2013 9:51 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: On 11/21/13, 9:43 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 11/21/2013 8:45 AM, John H wrote: On Thu, 21 Nov 2013 08:33:07 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 11/21/2013 7:13 AM, John H wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 17:44:26 -0500, wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 23:20:36 +0100, Stig Arne Bye wrote: John H wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 15:55:08 -0500, wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 15:42:58 -0500, John H wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 10:23:27 -0500, Hankİ wrote: Has anyone updated to IE11. Any comments or feedback? I'm still using XP. The latest I can use if IE8. Another good reason to run Firefox. IE8 will not open a lot of things but Firefox will. (Bill Gates trying to sell more product) I've had Firefox run into problems opening Microsoft stuff. But I like Firefox. Never had any problems with it, although it is slow to open compared to IE8. John H. -- Hope you're having a great day! I do also have one computer running XP SP3 with multiple browsers installed, and by using a stop watch, I measured and compared the time to open IE and Firefox after clicking the shortcut. After doing this test 5 times for each browser, I got the following results: - IE (version 8.0) opened in 1.37 seconds in average. - Firefox (version 25.0.1) opened in 3.16 seconds in average. A lot of IE is actually resident in Windoze. That would help explain it. I've learned patience when it comes to Firefox. John H. -- Hope you're having a great day! The first time after a reboot both Firefox and IE are slow to open on both of my computers (meaning four or five seconds) but after that they open fairly fast ... like a second or two. As previously mentioned, I don't use IE as a browser, but I just tried it for comparison. Doesn't seem to be any faster than Firefox. My computers are both laptops, one running Vista Home Premium (64 bit) and the other Win 7 Home Edition or something like that ... also 64 bit. When I bought them I was advised by a computer geek to make sure they had at least 4GB of RAM memory and a faster CPU (forget what speed they are). Both work fine, although Vista takes forever and a day to initially boot up. Once it's fully booted however it seems just as fast as Win 7. I also have an older XP laptop that has both IE and Firefox. It is slow as molasses compared to the Vista or Win 7 laptops. I called the builder of my computer yesterday about upgrading from XP. When mine was built, Vista was out. He told me to stick with XP, and that he'd upgrade it when a decent version came out. He offered to put Win 7 on it if I would bring it in. No charge...and it's not even an Apple! John H. -- Hope you're having a great day! Depending on your amount of RAM and CPU clock speed, skipping over Vista probably made sense. It's a resource hog. I was told however that most of the problems associated with Vista were caused by insufficient RAM and relatively slow CPUs ... and ... most were 32 bit machines. The computer geek that advised me as to minimum memory and CPU speed to run Vista was correct, IMO. Other than being slow to initially boot, I have absolutely no complaints with the Vista laptop. It's fast, is stable and has been free of crashes. I used it at the guitar shop for four years and used the Win 7 computer at home. Now that I am no longer involved much in the shop, I brought the Vista laptop home and it sat for a long time, unused. Then I realized it has a much bigger screen than the Win 7 computer, so I switched over to it. I just read some of the stuff printed on the stickers on it. Apparently it is an HP model that was designed primarily for multimedia applications. It has more memory and a faster CPU. It runs fine, lasts a long time. :-) Just stopwatched the laptop ...12 seconds from hitting the power on key on my laptop until it completes the boot process. And I was wrong...it does make a call to the server for its backup folder and my documents folder and my connected SDXC card. It's the SSD drive that makes it that fast. In windows land we call what you described, waking up from sleep mode. Just wondering if anybody here does anything on their machine that makes that few extra seconds matter? Also note, I have been running win 7 premium on this laptop since basically win 7 came out mainstream.... Don't ever remember one "crash" that wasn't browser related, Flash, or similar... No "Windoze" here ![]() Once you get my age, each second matters. John H. -- Hope you're having a great day! |
#38
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posted to rec.boats
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On 11/21/2013 11:40 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote:
On 11/21/13, 11:30 AM, KC wrote: On 11/21/2013 11:18 AM, Hankİ wrote: On 11/21/2013 9:51 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: On 11/21/13, 9:43 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 11/21/2013 8:45 AM, John H wrote: On Thu, 21 Nov 2013 08:33:07 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 11/21/2013 7:13 AM, John H wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 17:44:26 -0500, wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 23:20:36 +0100, Stig Arne Bye wrote: John H wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 15:55:08 -0500, wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 15:42:58 -0500, John H wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 10:23:27 -0500, Hankİ wrote: Has anyone updated to IE11. Any comments or feedback? I'm still using XP. The latest I can use if IE8. Another good reason to run Firefox. IE8 will not open a lot of things but Firefox will. (Bill Gates trying to sell more product) I've had Firefox run into problems opening Microsoft stuff. But I like Firefox. Never had any problems with it, although it is slow to open compared to IE8. John H. -- Hope you're having a great day! I do also have one computer running XP SP3 with multiple browsers installed, and by using a stop watch, I measured and compared the time to open IE and Firefox after clicking the shortcut. After doing this test 5 times for each browser, I got the following results: - IE (version 8.0) opened in 1.37 seconds in average. - Firefox (version 25.0.1) opened in 3.16 seconds in average. A lot of IE is actually resident in Windoze. That would help explain it. I've learned patience when it comes to Firefox. John H. -- Hope you're having a great day! The first time after a reboot both Firefox and IE are slow to open on both of my computers (meaning four or five seconds) but after that they open fairly fast ... like a second or two. As previously mentioned, I don't use IE as a browser, but I just tried it for comparison. Doesn't seem to be any faster than Firefox. My computers are both laptops, one running Vista Home Premium (64 bit) and the other Win 7 Home Edition or something like that ... also 64 bit. When I bought them I was advised by a computer geek to make sure they had at least 4GB of RAM memory and a faster CPU (forget what speed they are). Both work fine, although Vista takes forever and a day to initially boot up. Once it's fully booted however it seems just as fast as Win 7. I also have an older XP laptop that has both IE and Firefox. It is slow as molasses compared to the Vista or Win 7 laptops. I called the builder of my computer yesterday about upgrading from XP. When mine was built, Vista was out. He told me to stick with XP, and that he'd upgrade it when a decent version came out. He offered to put Win 7 on it if I would bring it in. No charge...and it's not even an Apple! John H. -- Hope you're having a great day! Depending on your amount of RAM and CPU clock speed, skipping over Vista probably made sense. It's a resource hog. I was told however that most of the problems associated with Vista were caused by insufficient RAM and relatively slow CPUs ... and ... most were 32 bit machines. The computer geek that advised me as to minimum memory and CPU speed to run Vista was correct, IMO. Other than being slow to initially boot, I have absolutely no complaints with the Vista laptop. It's fast, is stable and has been free of crashes. I used it at the guitar shop for four years and used the Win 7 computer at home. Now that I am no longer involved much in the shop, I brought the Vista laptop home and it sat for a long time, unused. Then I realized it has a much bigger screen than the Win 7 computer, so I switched over to it. I just read some of the stuff printed on the stickers on it. Apparently it is an HP model that was designed primarily for multimedia applications. It has more memory and a faster CPU. It runs fine, lasts a long time. :-) Just stopwatched the laptop ...12 seconds from hitting the power on key on my laptop until it completes the boot process. And I was wrong...it does make a call to the server for its backup folder and my documents folder and my connected SDXC card. It's the SSD drive that makes it that fast. In windows land we call what you described, waking up from sleep mode. Just wondering if anybody here does anything on their machine that makes that few extra seconds matter? Also note, I have been running win 7 premium on this laptop since basically win 7 came out mainstream.... Don't ever remember one "crash" that wasn't browser related, Flash, or similar... No "Windoze" here ![]() Ahh. I see indirectly that our 7th grade jokester, FlaJim, doesn't know the difference on a computer between "sleep" mode and a power up from absolutely off. Well, of course. Not interested what you see directly or indirectly. Although cold booting in 12 seconds is kind of cool. -- Americans deserve better. |
#39
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posted to rec.boats
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On 11/21/2013 11:18 AM, Hankİ wrote:
On 11/21/2013 9:51 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: On 11/21/13, 9:43 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 11/21/2013 8:45 AM, John H wrote: On Thu, 21 Nov 2013 08:33:07 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 11/21/2013 7:13 AM, John H wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 17:44:26 -0500, wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 23:20:36 +0100, Stig Arne Bye wrote: John H wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 15:55:08 -0500, wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 15:42:58 -0500, John H wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 10:23:27 -0500, Hankİ wrote: Has anyone updated to IE11. Any comments or feedback? I'm still using XP. The latest I can use if IE8. Another good reason to run Firefox. IE8 will not open a lot of things but Firefox will. (Bill Gates trying to sell more product) I've had Firefox run into problems opening Microsoft stuff. But I like Firefox. Never had any problems with it, although it is slow to open compared to IE8. John H. -- Hope you're having a great day! I do also have one computer running XP SP3 with multiple browsers installed, and by using a stop watch, I measured and compared the time to open IE and Firefox after clicking the shortcut. After doing this test 5 times for each browser, I got the following results: - IE (version 8.0) opened in 1.37 seconds in average. - Firefox (version 25.0.1) opened in 3.16 seconds in average. A lot of IE is actually resident in Windoze. That would help explain it. I've learned patience when it comes to Firefox. John H. -- Hope you're having a great day! The first time after a reboot both Firefox and IE are slow to open on both of my computers (meaning four or five seconds) but after that they open fairly fast ... like a second or two. As previously mentioned, I don't use IE as a browser, but I just tried it for comparison. Doesn't seem to be any faster than Firefox. My computers are both laptops, one running Vista Home Premium (64 bit) and the other Win 7 Home Edition or something like that ... also 64 bit. When I bought them I was advised by a computer geek to make sure they had at least 4GB of RAM memory and a faster CPU (forget what speed they are). Both work fine, although Vista takes forever and a day to initially boot up. Once it's fully booted however it seems just as fast as Win 7. I also have an older XP laptop that has both IE and Firefox. It is slow as molasses compared to the Vista or Win 7 laptops. I called the builder of my computer yesterday about upgrading from XP. When mine was built, Vista was out. He told me to stick with XP, and that he'd upgrade it when a decent version came out. He offered to put Win 7 on it if I would bring it in. No charge...and it's not even an Apple! John H. -- Hope you're having a great day! Depending on your amount of RAM and CPU clock speed, skipping over Vista probably made sense. It's a resource hog. I was told however that most of the problems associated with Vista were caused by insufficient RAM and relatively slow CPUs ... and ... most were 32 bit machines. The computer geek that advised me as to minimum memory and CPU speed to run Vista was correct, IMO. Other than being slow to initially boot, I have absolutely no complaints with the Vista laptop. It's fast, is stable and has been free of crashes. I used it at the guitar shop for four years and used the Win 7 computer at home. Now that I am no longer involved much in the shop, I brought the Vista laptop home and it sat for a long time, unused. Then I realized it has a much bigger screen than the Win 7 computer, so I switched over to it. I just read some of the stuff printed on the stickers on it. Apparently it is an HP model that was designed primarily for multimedia applications. It has more memory and a faster CPU. It runs fine, lasts a long time. :-) Just stopwatched the laptop ...12 seconds from hitting the power on key on my laptop until it completes the boot process. And I was wrong...it does make a call to the server for its backup folder and my documents folder and my connected SDXC card. It's the SSD drive that makes it that fast. In windows land we call what you described, waking up from sleep mode. I just timed sleep mode to ready to go (including connecting to router and Internet) on the Vista laptop. About 3-4 seconds. |
#40
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posted to rec.boats
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On 11/21/13, 3:07 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 11/21/2013 11:18 AM, Hankİ wrote: On 11/21/2013 9:51 AM, F.O.A.D. wrote: On 11/21/13, 9:43 AM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 11/21/2013 8:45 AM, John H wrote: On Thu, 21 Nov 2013 08:33:07 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 11/21/2013 7:13 AM, John H wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 17:44:26 -0500, wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 23:20:36 +0100, Stig Arne Bye wrote: John H wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 15:55:08 -0500, wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 15:42:58 -0500, John H wrote: On Wed, 20 Nov 2013 10:23:27 -0500, Hankİ wrote: Has anyone updated to IE11. Any comments or feedback? I'm still using XP. The latest I can use if IE8. Another good reason to run Firefox. IE8 will not open a lot of things but Firefox will. (Bill Gates trying to sell more product) I've had Firefox run into problems opening Microsoft stuff. But I like Firefox. Never had any problems with it, although it is slow to open compared to IE8. John H. -- Hope you're having a great day! I do also have one computer running XP SP3 with multiple browsers installed, and by using a stop watch, I measured and compared the time to open IE and Firefox after clicking the shortcut. After doing this test 5 times for each browser, I got the following results: - IE (version 8.0) opened in 1.37 seconds in average. - Firefox (version 25.0.1) opened in 3.16 seconds in average. A lot of IE is actually resident in Windoze. That would help explain it. I've learned patience when it comes to Firefox. John H. -- Hope you're having a great day! The first time after a reboot both Firefox and IE are slow to open on both of my computers (meaning four or five seconds) but after that they open fairly fast ... like a second or two. As previously mentioned, I don't use IE as a browser, but I just tried it for comparison. Doesn't seem to be any faster than Firefox. My computers are both laptops, one running Vista Home Premium (64 bit) and the other Win 7 Home Edition or something like that ... also 64 bit. When I bought them I was advised by a computer geek to make sure they had at least 4GB of RAM memory and a faster CPU (forget what speed they are). Both work fine, although Vista takes forever and a day to initially boot up. Once it's fully booted however it seems just as fast as Win 7. I also have an older XP laptop that has both IE and Firefox. It is slow as molasses compared to the Vista or Win 7 laptops. I called the builder of my computer yesterday about upgrading from XP. When mine was built, Vista was out. He told me to stick with XP, and that he'd upgrade it when a decent version came out. He offered to put Win 7 on it if I would bring it in. No charge...and it's not even an Apple! John H. -- Hope you're having a great day! Depending on your amount of RAM and CPU clock speed, skipping over Vista probably made sense. It's a resource hog. I was told however that most of the problems associated with Vista were caused by insufficient RAM and relatively slow CPUs ... and ... most were 32 bit machines. The computer geek that advised me as to minimum memory and CPU speed to run Vista was correct, IMO. Other than being slow to initially boot, I have absolutely no complaints with the Vista laptop. It's fast, is stable and has been free of crashes. I used it at the guitar shop for four years and used the Win 7 computer at home. Now that I am no longer involved much in the shop, I brought the Vista laptop home and it sat for a long time, unused. Then I realized it has a much bigger screen than the Win 7 computer, so I switched over to it. I just read some of the stuff printed on the stickers on it. Apparently it is an HP model that was designed primarily for multimedia applications. It has more memory and a faster CPU. It runs fine, lasts a long time. :-) Just stopwatched the laptop ...12 seconds from hitting the power on key on my laptop until it completes the boot process. And I was wrong...it does make a call to the server for its backup folder and my documents folder and my connected SDXC card. It's the SSD drive that makes it that fast. In windows land we call what you described, waking up from sleep mode. I just timed sleep mode to ready to go (including connecting to router and Internet) on the Vista laptop. About 3-4 seconds. I shut my laptop completely off when I am not using it. Desktop after 15 minutes the screen goes black and the hard drive spools down. I believe, though, the net connection stays active unless I change that setting. -- Religion: together we can find the cure. |
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