All hail Google's Chrome browser, the fastest browsing in the land. So says PC World, who just drag-raced Chrome against Firefox, Edge, Opera, Vivaldi, and Brave, with Google's uber-popular browser crossing the line first. So, Chrome is quick. But is it sleek? Hold that thought, we'll come back to it.
To assess browser performance, PC World used a trio of freely available benchmark tools, namely Speedometer 3.0, Jetstream2 and Motionmark 1.3. Speedometer tests web page rendering, Jetstream is more focused on assembly and Javascript, while Motionmark tests in-browser graphics.
PC World ran the tests on what they described as a mid-spec PC, sporting an AMD Ryzen 5 3600 CPU, Nvidia RTX 3060 Ti graphics, 16 GB of DDR4-3200 memory and a Samsung 970 Evo SSD. Slightly oddly, PC World chose Windows 10 as opposed to 11 as its OS platform for the test.
To cut a long story short, Chrome came first in Speedometer and second in the other two benchmarks. Where it came second, it did so by a very thin margin, making it clearly the fastest browser overall.
PC World does point out that there's more to a browser than mere speed. «Google’s business model is based on data processing and the company is repeatedly criticized for collecting a disproportionate amount of user data,» PC World says. And it has a point.
What the test didn't touch on is resource usage and efficiency. In terms of the former, Chrome has something of a reputation as a memory hog. As I type these words, my current Chrome instance has multiple tabs that each individually are soaking up about 1GB of memory.
With that kind of footprint, it doesn't take many tabs to eat up 16 or even 32 GB of memory. Likewise, Chrome isn't exactly renowned for efficiency, with the usual refrain being that you should steer clear if maximising battery life is a really big deal.
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Of course, for many users, a lot of these considerations end
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