Posted February 26, 2018
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Speaking of which: seeing people defend Chrome's insane RAM usage in articles like this one is gloriously pissing me off. "It's good that it uses all your RAM, after all, what's the point of having free RAM?" Well, for starters, I don't have surplus RAM and need it for more important applications than Chrome, FFS. That whole argument, which I've seen being used all over the web, only holds up if Chrome is the only or at least main application you're using and I like to think that even today browsing the web is not the main purpose of desktop machines.
1. Your program is the main program running on the machine, so don't worry about how much you're hogging.
2. The customer is always willing to upgrade hardware to run your product, especially if it's RAM, since RAM is cheap anymore.
Yes, these are actually taught in schools. See why this happens, now?
EDIT: The release comic, too, was full of really bad ideas of how chrome was supposed to be faster than firefox and everything else, too. These ideas all would've marginally improved the browser's performance, but reduced overall system performance due to memory fragmentation, memory hogging, etc. What kills me is that faster browsers actually fell for the bait and started copying the bad ideas. It's like the current gun politics in the US: existing laws would've prevented the problem we're facing if they were enforced, but now politicians are willing to throw away everything and they don't even understand that the average voter in the US can see through the anti-gun propaganda (which is why gun control never worked in the US before). Or, like on steam, alot of the newer games are still minecraft ripoffs, that copy every negative feature of minecraft while not providing any of the features that made minecraft popular. It's like the people at the tip get ideas and refuse to listen to the people at the base of the triangle.
Post edited February 26, 2018 by kohlrak