Improve your UMPC performance….for free.

Posted on 01 September 2009, Last updated on 01 September 2009 by

Loox U with desktop screen

I’m sitting here in front of a huge 1920×1080 screen with a 1280×800 screen as an extended display. Windows 7 is running and I’ve got 10 Firefox tabs open, Windows Media player, Tweetdeck, Windows Live Photo Gallery, Windows Live Mesh, Windows Paint and Windows Live Writer running. (Love those Windows Live apps!) It’s all running smoothly on the tiny Fujitsu Loox U (U820/U2010) in 1GB RAM.

The last time I was able to do this was with the 1.8Ghz version of  the OQO 2+  but it wasn’t as smooth as this. Why?

1 OS

2 Fast SSD

3 NoScript

Point 1. Windows 7 is better than Vista. No argument.  The second point is also well known. A fast SSD helps with program and file access. It also helps with swap files when, in situations like this, you’ve used up all your memory. I’ll talk more about the (awesome) Runcore Pro IV that i’ve got installed, in another post. (Hint: 80MB+ max read speed)

The last point is something I’ve talked about before but can now highlight in a very very simple way.

With 10 tabs running on Firefox, the chances are that you’re using a few heavy ajax or flash-based sites. It should be no secret that web browsing is one of the most CPU intensive tasks you can do on a device and even if you’ve got windows minimised, it’s still using the CPU in the background.

Enter Noscript.

I’ve used Noscript in the past to optimise my browsing experience and there are other, more scientific tests that highlight the advantages but today, because of the dual screen setup I have here, the effect is extremely pronounced.These two CPU graphs taken over about 2 minutes of browsing, show the difference.

Before. Browsing websites. Hitting CPU limits. You can see the typical heartbeat of a flash animation.

beforenoscript

After. Browsing websites. CPU not hitting limits. Average utilization is much much less and that heartbeat has gone. A few more processes running in this test too.

afternoscript

Side-by-side view:

 beforenoscript (2) afternoscript (2)

The difference is huge, very noticeable and within 2 minutes of installing NoScript, the fan turned off. It’s firing up every now and again but it’s not pegged on like it was before. As I type this I have 12 tabs open, the Firefox process is averaging 4.5%. I’ve done tests like this in the past and seen the CPU averaging 15-20%.

Bloggers and advertisers will hate you for it but if you’re using a UMPC, it’s one of the best CPU/Battery life/heat/noise savers there is out there. And it’s free.

Pause when minimised.

There’s something else that can be learned from this. When using web-based applications, there is no such thing as a device in standby. ARM and Intel would do well to encourage desktop browser developers to enable an optional ‘pause when minimised’ feature (there’s a reason that the iPhone doesn’t multi-task) . It will have a huge effect on the mobile web experience. If it saves as much as I’ve just seen it would be more significant for the mobile web than a couple of years of technology development. I vote for Opera 11 to have this feature. Combined with ‘Turbo’ it would make Opera the best browser for mobile computers.

11 Comments For This Post

  1. Steve 'Chippy' Paine says:

    New article: Improve your UMPC performance….for free. http://cli.gs/TBgup

  2. Patrick says:

    Other important thing on Firefox is not to have too many bookmarks. Bookmarks eat RAM like CRAZY!

  3. Emin Tolga Özdemir says:

    Improve your UMPC performance….for free. http://bit.ly/U4NUE (via feedly)

  4. sara smith says:

    Improve your UMPC performance….for free. | UMPCPortal – Ultra … http://bit.ly/3cIXvK

  5. John Q. Public says:

    I turn off Javascript on my Nokia N810 and it makes a world of difference.

  6. Ben K. says:

    So….how do you turn off no script?
    Is this the enable java script option?

  7. PotHot says:

    you will find afterall that you have to enable almost all of the scripts to make websites worthwhile experience. for viewing sites its fine, but for almost ANY kind of interaction you need scripts.

    just using an extension like FLashBlock is almost all you need, its flash movies & ads that cause 99% of the slowdown. plus you still have a placeholder to view them manually & all your other scripts are still running so everything still works.

  8. chippy says:

    Thanks PotHot.

    Introducing Noscript does come with the need to keep an eye on what is being blocked. It’s true.

    I’m going to check out FlashBlock.

    Thanks for the tip.

  9. Brett says:

    thanks for the tip too :)

    flashblock works “too” well !

    I wonder how ling it will be until advertisers find a way to get around it

    (Dynamism flash avert is now gone from UMPCportal and jkkmobile!)

  10. tino says:

    I have two profiles on my firefox and one of them is using noscript. IMO its not a very good product.

    It botches too many regular sites with unexpected effects. I use the combination of flashblock and RIP (remove this perminantly) add-ons and IME are much better alterative than noscript.

  11. Steve 'Chippy' Paine says:

    Ad blocking hurts, yes, but flash ads need to die. http://www.umpcportal.com/2009/09/improve-your-umpc-performance-for-free/ @arstechnica

Search UMPCPortal

Find ultra mobile PCs, Ultrabooks, Netbooks and handhelds PCs quickly using the following links:

Acer C740
11.6" Intel Celeron 3205U
Acer Aspire Switch 10
10.1" Intel Atom Z3745
Acer Aspire E11 ES1
11.6" Intel Celeron N2840
Acer C720 Chromebook
11.6" Intel Celeron 2955U
Lenovo Thinkpad X220
12.5" Intel Core i5
Dell Chromebook 11
11.6" Intel Celeron 2955U
Dell Latitude E7440
14.0" Intel Core i5-4200U
ASUS T100
10.0" Intel Atom Z3740
Acer Chromebook 11 CB3-131
11.6" Intel Celeron N2807
Acer Aspire S3 (Haswell)
13.3" Intel Core 4th-Gen (Haswell)