An Even Faster Browser?
octavian755 asks: "Seems that a 16-year-old Irish student has created an Internet browser called XWEB,
which is the fastest browser known to date. This browser is said to be capable of boosting surfing speeds on a dial-up connection by 100 to 500 percent. What I would like to know is something like this even possible?" Update: 01/20 07:30 GMT by C : As folks have pointed out, this story is a duplicate. Also, a minor title gaffe corrected. Sorry about that.
What, weren't the responses given the last time this was posted enough???
:)
Damn, even I remember this one and I'm notorious for my short term memory loss. Who was smoking what when this one got posted?
I left my body to science, but I'm afraid they've turned it down...
It warps time, and reports itself again!
Keep your packets off my GNU/Girlfriend!
Hey Cliff.
You oughta, like, read Slashdot more often.
It's not.
No, I haven't used it. But there are simple facts, like the speed of light. The thing is this: data can only be transferred so fast.
If I have a 56k connection, than the fastest I can transfer is 56k (I know there are other considerations, but that's not important). It's that simple.
There are some things that can be done to speed it up: cache things. Render things faster, but they are all stopgap measures. I don't care what it says, the fact is that you only get so much speed. Any more just is not there.
It's like saying my car gets infinite miles per gallon. I can improve things, but I still need some fuel no matter what I do.
Nice to know that I'd be able to go on vacation, come back to /. and see everything I missed reposted.
No technical details, not even an 'open' demo so we can see it's not rigged.
The usual excuse; this is such advanced, groundbreaking stuff and he doesn't want anyone to steal his ideas until after he's been given some development capital.
Scam. Scam. Scam...
455fe10422ca29c4933f95052b792ab2
That's not true; some coders may write 500, some may write 50, and others may write only five.
I'm not even that sure it is worth measuring the lines of code written as a performance indicator either; I've had days at work where I've written only one line of code - but it was the line to solve a random threading deadlock; and so it was the correct line to write.