But the Rendering and JavaScript performance are not on par with Chrome or Firefox - both of which I've tried, and they do not give me the same Page Reload and Tab Crashing issues IE does. It does load fast, and it runs decently well. It's a Quad Core machine with 8GB RAM, so I know it's not an issue of it being underpowered. I did a full reboot from scratch a couple of months ago when I switch from Platter to SSD and the only apps I have loaded other than mostly default Microsoft Metro Apps is Office 365, Kinovea, Coach's Eye, and Sound Forge. It has page reloads all the time, crashes sporatically. I don't like loading up redundant applications on my PC. Microsoft decided to use the Octane 2.0, developed by Google, to look at JavaScript numbers for the 64-bit versions of Edge, IE, Chrome and Firefox running on Windows 10: To most of us, that's a lot of jargon to take in, but there's a simple way to show the increase in performance: use benchmarks. With these changes, the performance of individual code patterns minified using UglifyJS that we tested, improved between 20-50%." So in Windows 10 and Microsoft Edge, we've added new fast paths, improved inlining and optimized some heuristics in Chakra's JIT compiler to ensure that minified code runs as fast, if not faster than the non-minified versions. ![]() ![]() ![]() "The experiment confirmed that usage of minified code is extremely popular on the web as it exists and amongst others, UglifyJS is very commonly used in today's web. For example, Microsoft looked at a random sample of around 4,000 sites, out of the top 10,000 sites on the Internet, and found that 95% of them had minified code, which compresses the original code to its smallest size. In a highly technical blog post, Microsoft talked about how it was trying to improve the Chakra JavaScript engine for Microsoft Edge.
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