04-16-2009
I stopped using Firefox about a year ago and switched to Opera permanently because Firefox started taking up too much CPU on my machine as well...i think it has to do with how it interacts with libc...anyway, I'm sick of FF crashing constantly.
I usually have 20+ tabs open in Opera hehe but it handles memory so efficiently that I never have problems on my 2.6GHz, 768MB RAM Intel machine.
I wish they'd make a Linux version of Google Chrome...I'm dying to try it out...I did try it out once ages ago on my sisters laptop but it's about time a Linux version came out!
So right now, I only use FF for testing sites and in case I need to use Firebug to debug some AJAX calls but other than that, it's all about Opera.
4 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. UNIX Desktop Questions & Answers
I have just seen someone using the OPERA browser - it looks quite good and seems to have a friendly GUI.
Can I get this for UNIX(Solaris 8 is my OS)??? Does anyone have this installed on their UNIX workstation?? How is it performing??
All comments and advice is welcome!! (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Kanu77
1 Replies
2. AIX
On AIX 5.3 host, the lvm_queryvg call does not work properly and results in a sudden memory rise. This is happening on one particular host and the call works fine on another host.
Is this a known issue and is there any patch available for this? (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: sandiworld
0 Replies
3. Solaris
Has anyone gotten Opera 9.5 to work? I'm using Solaris Sparc 5.10. The browser is unusable. It crashes even when viewing Opera's Desktop Team blog. I've asked Opera about this, but no reply. I've never been able to get the 9.5 betas to work either. From one Opera user's blog, I don't see any... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: cooldude
0 Replies
4. Solaris
Hi,
There is a abrupt memory rise observed for a process on solaris.
When the process is started the memory is around 268 MB and is stable for a day. Then suddenly the memory increased to 4364 MB.
Below is the pmap -xs output for the process (only for heap)
Address Kbytes ... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Nidds
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT PHP
ob_gzhandler
OB_GZHANDLER(3) 1 OB_GZHANDLER(3)
ob_gzhandler - ob_start callback function to gzip output buffer
SYNOPSIS
string ob_gzhandler (string $buffer, int $mode)
DESCRIPTION
ob_gzhandler(3) is intended to be used as a callback function for ob_start(3) to help facilitate sending gz-encoded data to web browsers
that support compressed web pages. Before ob_gzhandler(3) actually sends compressed data, it determines what type of content encoding the
browser will accept ("gzip", "deflate" or none at all) and will return its output accordingly. All browsers are supported since it's up to
the browser to send the correct header saying that it accepts compressed web pages. If a browser doesn't support compressed pages this
function returns FALSE.
PARAMETERS
o $buffer
-
o $mode
-
RETURN VALUES
EXAMPLES
Example #1
ob_gzhandler(3) example
<?php
ob_start("ob_gzhandler");
?>
<html>
<body>
<p>This should be a compressed page.</p>
</body>
</html>
NOTES
Note
ob_gzhandler(3) requires the zlib extension.
Note
You cannot use both ob_gzhandler(3) and zlib.output_compression. Also note that using zlib.output_compression is preferred over
ob_gzhandler(3).
SEE ALSO
ob_start(3), ob_end_flush(3).
PHP Documentation Group OB_GZHANDLER(3)