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#1
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#2
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#3
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Is your app slow from the word Go, or does it degrade over time? |
#4
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Is your app slow from the word Go, or does it degrade over time? |
#5
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On Jun 1, 4:55 pm, Dan Rumney <danrum... (AT) 77617270mail (DOT) net> wrote: Is your app slow from the word Go, or does it degrade over time? I have problems on both fronts in IE6. From the get go and degradation. The user has control over the number of objects operated on and IE6 is much worse than IE7 when the number of objects increases. I've considered reducing the capabilities (max objects) when I detect a slow browser, but that seems really cheesy, and I'd rather just get the code as fast and clean as I can. For large numbers of objects, the newest browsers do all their calculations and statistics in seconds. IE6 is crazy slow. |
#6
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On Jun 1, 4:55 pm, Dan Rumney <danrum... (AT) 77617270mail (DOT) net> wrote: Is your app slow from the word Go, or does it degrade over time? I have problems on both fronts in IE6. From the get go and degradation. The user has control over the number of objects operated on and IE6 is much worse than IE7 when the number of objects increases. I've considered reducing the capabilities (max objects) when I detect a slow browser, but that seems really cheesy, and I'd rather just get the code as fast and clean as I can. For large numbers of objects, the newest browsers do all their calculations and statistics in seconds. IE6 is crazy slow. |
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