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What are you trying to measure? Measuring perf is a very difficult problem, and frankly most browser benchmarks don't mean a whole lot to the end user experience.
There are Javascript tests where now IE/Firefox/Chrome are all so close most users could never tell them apart.
There are rendering perf tests where IE9 will destroy the competition (today), but there aren't many websites that really take advantage of it.
There are standards tests where even a mediocre score frankly is good enough, but all the major players are near-perfect now.
Measuring memory use doesn't mean a whole lot either, and actually measuring memory accurrately is super difficult.
There are Javascript tests where now IE/Firefox/Chrome are all so close most users could never tell them apart.
There are rendering perf tests where IE9 will destroy the competition (today), but there aren't many websites that really take advantage of it.
There are standards tests where even a mediocre score frankly is good enough, but all the major players are near-perfect now.
Measuring memory use doesn't mean a whole lot either, and actually measuring memory accurrately is super difficult.
Originally Posted by Kremlin,Sep 16 2010, 10:42 AM
What are you trying to measure? Measuring perf is a very difficult problem, and frankly most browser benchmarks don't mean a whole lot to the end user experience.
There are Javascript tests where now IE/Firefox/Chrome are all so close most users could never tell them apart.
There are rendering perf tests where IE9 will destroy the competition (today), but there aren't many websites that really take advantage of it.
There are standards tests where even a mediocre score frankly is good enough, but all the major players are near-perfect now.
Measuring memory use doesn't mean a whole lot either, and actually measuring memory accurrately is super difficult.
There are Javascript tests where now IE/Firefox/Chrome are all so close most users could never tell them apart.
There are rendering perf tests where IE9 will destroy the competition (today), but there aren't many websites that really take advantage of it.
There are standards tests where even a mediocre score frankly is good enough, but all the major players are near-perfect now.
Measuring memory use doesn't mean a whole lot either, and actually measuring memory accurrately is super difficult.
Internet Explorer 9 beta is coming out in 45 minutes, might be worth trying that out
Originally Posted by derryck,Sep 16 2010, 11:56 AM
That sounds like a great idea, Microsoft has such a strong history of releasing IE Beta's after they have been completely tested and after all security concerns have been addressed...oh wait, that's not accurate.
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