This is probably getting a little off-topic. but I think it was something we were all talking about off and on. But MC has been planning it for years, possibly even before he joined the team. The problem is that the web standards move too fast because of Chromium. Which... is probably why Mozilla sold out and became desperate to keep up by ditching most of what made it unique and made itself more Chrome-like. Obviously I can sympathize with why they did what they did, even if I don't like what they did. I'm not sure I wouldn't have done the same thing in their position.back2themoon wrote: ↑2023-12-21, 13:50I remember talk about future plans (might have been Tobin) to improve multi-core performance?
(not to be confused with multi-process)
In any case, though... if you are shopping for a computer to optimize Pale Moon performance, you want the best single-threaded performance you can get. Pale Moon also isn't the only application that is still in this weird situation where throwing more cores at it doesn't help much, and you need to try and maximize IPC and clockspeed instead. You'd be surprised how many things just don't benefit from modern CPU design, or can't be changed to take advantage of it. This was server-class technology until recently, and not all workloads for normal users can actually benefit from it. The best case would actually be if Intel would bring back unlocked quad-cores or even dual-cores... get all those extra dies out of the way and overclock a smaller number of cores as high as they will go. 8 cores just isn't going to help, 16 helps even less... sigh. I hate modern computers. They don't give us real performance improvements anymore, they just shove server-class technology from last generation in our faces and expect us to make do.