While Microsoft Edge hardly overshadow the industry champion, namely Chrome, Microsoft has published a blog post designed to highlight the superiority of her baby in the exploitation of resources. According to the home tests, the browser Made in Redmond is up to 70% more efficient than the competition.
Microsoft, according to his blog post, conducted three separate tests. Initially, the firm has merely a comparison in laboratory conditions. Specifically, it opened loop pages from popular sites (Facebook, Amazon, Wikipedia, etc.) on a Book area. And according to his statements, Edge would have shown significantly more efficient in this exercise, in particular as regards calls to the GPU than its competitors Chrome, Opera and Firefox (in this order; see chart below). In one second, Microsoft said reviewing the telemetry data “ millions of PCs under Windows 10 .” And, unsurprisingly, it is here that Edge is the better shot. It will be noted, however, that Firefox did not go far to grant the title of browser “ most effective in real life, every day ” claimed by the heavy weight of Redmond. In one third phase, finally, Microsoft has engaged in a stupid and evil self test. Book by four surface, his teams have faced four competing browsers in an exercise of streaming to battery drain. And, you guessed it, it’s Edge again who triumphed. With 7:22 minutes counter, the browser has posted about an hour of additional autonomy from the time allocated to Opera (6:18 minutes). As for Firefox and Chrome, they would have dropped the weapons much earlier, since they are not credited, respectively, than 5 hours 9 minutes and 4 hours 19 minutes.
course, Microsoft does not miss the opportunity to draw the necessary conclusions: Edge is up to 70% more economical than the Google browser and is distinguished as the most effective player on the market of energy management. Undeniably, the argument is irrelevant. Remains to be seen if it will be enough to convince Windows users 10 to let a chance to younger brother of Internet Explorer …
Tuesday, June 21, 2016
Browsers: Microsoft comparative in terms of autonomy – DigitalVersus
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