Tom Krazit | May 26, 2009
Google has shifted the JavaScript engine that powers its
Chrome
Web browser into a higher gear.
The
company announced Thursday that an update to Chrome's V8 JavaScript engine,
combined with a new version of the Webkit browser engine, should improve the
loading speed of JavaScript-heavy Web pages by up to 30 percent. The updates
will be automatically downloaded to existing copies of Chrome.
JavaScript engines are one of the new fronts in the browser wars, with various vendors touting
the performance of their browsers this year in hopes of unseating the
competition. Chrome did very well on CNET JavaScript tests earlier this year, besting
Firefox,
Safari, and Internet Explorer.
Google
also announced a few other changes to Chrome, including the addition of new
features that let you erase embarrassing (or NSFW) Web sites from the
most-visited list that appears when you open a new tab in Chrome. And Chrome now
has a feature found in many browsers: Form autofill.
See
A faster Chrome means what?
Via
Crave CNET
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