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Mozilla Unleashes JaegerMonkey Enabled Firefox 4

An anonymous reader writes "Mozilla has published the first Firefox 4 build that integrates a new JavaScript engine that aims to match the performance in IE9 and reduces the gap to Safari, Opera and Chrome. This is really the big news we have been waiting for all along with Firefox 4 and it appears that the JavaScript performance is pretty dramatic and seems to beat IE9 at least as far as ConceivablyTech shows. Good to see Mozilla back in the game." The Mozilla blog gives a good overview of the improvements this brings; Tom's Hardware also covers the release.

10 of 279 comments (clear)

  1. The Slashdot Firefox Paradox by jfengel · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Ironically, the primary site for which I really need a faster Javascript engine is Slashdot. For a heavily-commented article I switch to Chrome.

  2. In a Beta? by reub2000 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    My understanding of the term Beta is that all features are complete. Has something changed?

    1. Re:In a Beta? by Red+Flayer · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I'm going to drink JaegerMonkey all fokin night. I fokin shower in dat shit.

      That's a novel approach. Normally when *I* drink Jaeger all night, I end up shitting in the fucking shower in the morning.

      Seriously. That stuff is like using a brass-bristle brush on the inside of your bowels and then using clamps to pry your asshole open to give the residue unimpeded egress.

      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
  3. Kinda Sad by DeionXxX · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Anyone else kinda sad that now Firefox is playing catchup. When no one cared about JS performance, the Open Source crowd was king, then all of a sudden big corporate money was poured into JS performance and now FOSS is lagging behind.

    It seems that FOSS can't compete head to head with corporate backed projects, if the corporation actually cares. For example, MS didn't care about JS performance in IE6/IE7 and Firefox was king. Now, Microsoft is trying to compete in the browser space again and IE9 is catching up in features and exceeding Firefox in certain respects.

    This is coming from a very long time Firefox user, but I have definitely switched to Chrome for general web browsing. I stick with Firefox for development though because of the large amount of niche plugins specifically tailored for development.

    1. Re:Kinda Sad by nine-times · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Isn't Chrome open source? And isn't IE9 still unreleased?

      Look, there's nothing wrong with Firefox. Performance improvements are lagging a bit behind Chrome, but obviously they're working on it. It's still a great browser.

      Safari, Chrome, and Firefox are all great browsers, and they're all (at least to some extent) open source browsers. When a story comes out about how Firefox is preparing a new release with substantial performance improvements, I think you have to bend over backward to turn it into a sad anti-FOSS story.

  4. 4.0b5 on Snow Leopard by StuartHankins · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Slashdot is quite perky with the last couple of betas. But it's especially disheartening that the video "upgrades" in this most current release fall short on my platform. When viewing the demo page ( http://demos.hacks.mozilla.org/openweb/HWACCEL/ ), I get 1 fps. I get 6 fps when running the same demo on Firefox inside a Parallels Windows XP SP3 VM. The VM is significantly faster... which boggles the mind actually.

    So far as I remember, this was an Apple issue not necessarily a Mozilla issue, but still disappointing.

  5. Are We Fast Yet? by theY4Kman · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Check out http://arewefastyet.com/ to see the speeds of several JavaScript engines compared to Mozilla's.

    1. Re:Are We Fast Yet? by denis-The-menace · · Score: 4, Interesting

      OMG, all the 32bit Browsers beat the 64bit browsers!

      Why did I bother for a 64Bit Windows 7 OS!

      --
      Obama's legacy: (N)othing (S)ecure (A)nywhere and (T)error (S)imulation (A)dministration
  6. Re:Back in the game? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    They're getting pretty close to matching chrome and safari: http://arewefastyet.com/ ... and getting there without breaking backwards compatibility horribly like chrome and safari have.

  7. Re:Compatibility by BZ · · Score: 3, Interesting

    What's interesting about conformance tests is that unless they're exhaustive the only thing you can tell from them is how much a browser cares about conformance... by looking at the score when the test is first published, before people go and fix just the issues that are tested for.

    As far as I know Opera is not "cheating" on its sputnik results but is in fact "cheating" (in the effect of implementing effectively bare-minimum functionality needed to pass) on some of the Acid3 bits. Precisely the ones Firefox is not passing, as it happens.