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New Firefox Quantum Is Now Twice As Fast

Firefox

Years ago I used Firefox as my everyday browser until Chrome came along, then a few months ago I switched to Opera having also courted Vivaldi for a few months. Last week I stumbled upon the new Firefox Quantum (Firefox 57) which is due to be launched on November 14th and I was gobsmacked at the speed of the new browser. It’s being touted as twice as fast as Firefox 52 (when measured using Speedometer 2.0) and I can certainly vouch for the fact that it’s noticeably quicker than the other browsers I just mentioned.

Speed Tests

The odd thing is that the benchmarks I ran on Firefox 56 using Speedometer 2.0 gave me a reverse result of 57.6 points for the current version of Firefox and 32.2 for the new Firefox 57 (Quantum), with both PCs using the same Internet connection and having similar specifications.

Speedometer 2.0

I then ran further benchmarks using Basemark Web 3.0 and Speed Battle, resulting in similar results as shown in the diagrams below.

Basemark

Speed-Battle

In the Speed-Battle benchmark, the new Firefox 57 (Quantum) was the clear winner which left me scratching my head as to the veracity of benchmarks in the first place. Most of my benchmarking has been for testing hardware pre and post-overclocking, which is the only true measure one can really use when modifying clock speeds or trying other hardware or software.

So, What’s the New Firefox Quantum Like?

That all depends what you measure it against and my first impression was one of a noticeable speed boost (when compared to say Opera and Chrome) when loading pages. In fact, the speed difference is so marked that I was prompted to write about my experience here at DCT, which is not something I’m accustomed to doing since I consider browsers to be rather dull when compared to gaming and gadgets and most of us generally stick with the one we are most comfortable with, for the long haul anyway.

Having become accustomed to Opera’s superb speed-dial page which shows your frequently and practically unlimited most visited sites displayed in large colourful thumbnails, which can be manually arranged using drag and drop, I was a little disappointed to find that Firefox Quantum only displays twelve much smaller thumbnails which cannot be rearranged at all. You can however increase the default amount of thumbnails by entering about:config in the address bar and scroll down to browser.newtabpage.activity-stream.topSitesCount and change the figure from twelve to any multiple of six. I’m sure there are other tweaks that can be made, especially since the Top Sites tab is mostly white space serving no purpose whatsoever, much like Google Chrome which has zero top sites customisation at all.

Perhaps I’ve just gotten so used to Opera’s handy features that the speed of the new Firefox Quantum may become less important.

For example, when you highlight text in Opera, to either copy or search, a handy little balloon pops up above your selection thus:

Do the same in other browsers and you’ll have to right-click and select the action you want to take. A tiny detail I know, but when you write a lot, copy and paste stuff, look for synonyms and Lord knows what else, these details become very much larger and hard to live without.

The new Firefox has been designed with a new  engine (Rust), comes with Pocket so that you can save content for viewing across devices when you wish and a new Photon UI which has a much more modern look than previous Firefox versions. All the add-ons, extensions and plug-ins that I currently use in Opera, Vivaldi or Chrome work perfectly well in Quantum too.

I’m writing this article in Firefox Quantum right now in fact, whilst browsing other pages and it is very fast indeed. I’ll certainly be using it as my second browser, as moving away from the features I’ve gotten used to in Opera would be a wrench at the moment, but I would urge readers to take the beta for a spin before it becomes official on November 14th.

Download Firefox Quantum Beta and/or Developer Edition here

Firefox 57 Beta release notes

15 thoughts on “New Firefox Quantum Is Now Twice As Fast”

  1. Looks like the official release date for Firefox Quantum is November 14. Think I will wait until it it gets out of Beta stage and wait for the update. I am running Firefox 56.0.1 now. I do hope this works out for Mozilla since Firefox is my browser of choice along with IE11. Thanks Marc for the heads up on this.

  2. It’s really good. I test it on my laptop, which it is considered to be a snail to Palemoon, due to their dual-threaded workload.
    Ever since I activated e10s, the computer has been solid and responsive.
    The noticeable speed differences were at Firefox 54 to 55, 55 to 56, and 56 to 58.
    57 is nice and speedy, but not enough of a jaw-dropper.
    All-in-all, I hope that Firefox is placed back at the top.

    Only if they keep pushing performance, that is.

  3. Since Firefox is now sporting a 64 bit version, I wonder what the difference will be with Waterfox, as it was the reason I switched. I’ll also wait for a while, having my share testing out Betas, Mindblower

  4. I’d be on this like white on rice if LastPass worked with the Beta version. No go. They promise it will be ready by Nov. 14. I’ve lived without it this long. Another three weeks or so is not all that long.

    1. Yesterday, looking at Firefox Nightly news, LastPass Beta now works with Firefox 57 Beta and Firefox 58 Nightly, when Firefox 57 comes to mainstream, it will be changed to LastPass Stable. It works great.

  5. I hope Firefox Quantum is compatible with LastPass as Firefox 56 is not allowing me to access LastPass at the moment.
    Its a pity that firefox does not ensure such compatibility before issuing updates and then blocking other programs thus forcing the user to do their dirty work for them regarding compatiblity.

    1. Odd. I have LastPass Stable on my Firefox 56(Desktop) and LastPass BETA on my Firefox 57(Laptop). They work great.

    2. I have LP on FF 56.0.1 (64-bit), and it works fine, except for one thing. I can’t search for an account from the search bar, like I used to do, and still can do in Chrome. I have to open the vault and search there. Does anyone else have this problem, or maybe a solution?

      Ah, just scrolled down a little and say Jack’s link to the helpdesk. I’ll check that out.

  6. Does it concern you at all that Opera is now owned by a Chinese company that supposedly has close ties to the government and could easily insert data collection programming unknown to the user?

  7. Will this latest version work in Linux Mint? I see nothing about it on that link.

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