Mozilla turbocharges Firefox, touts major speed gains
Mozilla said Friday it has added the fruits of a two-month JavaScript turbo power project to the latest preview of its next browser, Firefox 3.1, that boosts some benchmark speeds by nearly 40 times over Firefox 3.0.
The new Mozilla JavaScript interpreter is also about 2.4 times faster than the newest interpreter slated for Apple Inc.'s Safari, according to benchmark tests.
Dubbed "TraceMonkey," the revamped JavaScript engine will make possible Web-based applications that are today too sluggish to be acceptable, said Mike Shaver, the company's interim head of engineering. "We're making JavaScript disappear as far as performance is concerned," said Shaver, who pointed out a photo-editing demonstration that his predecessor, Mike Schroepfer, put together to strut TraceMonkey's speed.
"One example is to use the browser as a very simple PhotoShop," said Shaver. "[Editing an image requires] things that, for each step, takes the better part of a second. That's not a great user experience. But [with TraceMonkey], now you have something that comes close to interactive performance."
Shreopfer posted a video that showed side-by-side comparisons between Firefox 3.0 and Firefox 3.1 with TraceMonkey on his blog Friday. Users can also run the simple application themselves using Firefox 3.0 or the latest version of 3.1.
For the moment, TraceMonkey has been disabled in Firefox 3.1, which is currently in alpha stage and slated to reach beta next month, but the faster JavaScript engine will be turned on at some point. "We are planning for it to be there in Firefox 3.1," said Shaver. "It won't have all the capabilities, there's more than a couple of months of work left, but we are targeting 3.1."
Mozilla has tentatively set the ship date of a finished Firefox 3.1 for late this year or early 2009.
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