Archive for the 'Review' Category

Firefox and Firefox 3 Beta 1 Memory Usage

It looks like not only me feel Firefox that consumed too much memory than it should, Duncan Riley from techcrunch.com also feel the same way. This is snippet Duncan expressing his displeasure to what his beloved browser had become.

Then my love affair with Firefox started to end. Firefox 1.5 (and the earlier versions, I started at 0.7) never skipped a beat, and unlike IE it had tabs, which were a god send to me as it was to many others. Mozilla launched Firefox 2.0, and suddenly my internet experience started to sour. I’m a heavy tab user, so it’s not unusual for me to have 15, 20 and even more tabs open, it’s how I read my feeds in the morning, opening up the stories that interest me for later reading. Firefox had what has been called by others “memory leaks,” which in laymen’s terms meant that it tripped out your memory on a PC, froze up and crashed…and far too regularly. I became a Mac user this year, and the first thing I did when I started up OS X for the first time was to download Firefox, hoping that perhaps it was a PC problem. It wasn’t. Same memory problems, same crashes. Mac fanboys told me that it was my fault for using plugins, so I deleted Firefox and started again without the plugins. Same problems, constant freezing (even with 4gb on a MacPro) and crashes. I switched to Safari for a time, and as much as it was a decent browser, it doesn’t play nice with all sites, in particular with the WYSIWIG backend on Wordpress blogs. Then came Flock 1.0. I’d never been a Flock fan before, always believing it to be nothing more than Firefox with plugins (Flock is based on the Firefox engine). Having watched the demo at TechCrunch 40 I downloaded the beta of Flock 1.0 and surfed away without incident. Some how the folks at Flock had tweaked the underlying Firefox engine to stop the memory issues.

Firefox 3 Beta 1: The Memory Use Says It All

I also once, a Firefox fan until I found Maxthon. The main reason I switch browser is memory consuming. At that time I only have 512MB of RAM and I am heavy multi-tasking guy and heavy tab user. Usually my PC will on 24/7 so it is normal for me to have 30+ tabs with Maxthon, this something that I can call impossible with Firefox.

To give you some idea how different their memory consuming, I got screenshot for you.

firefox-and-maxthon-memory-usage

As you can see from the screenshot above Firefox using nearly 50MB of memory and I just start it, with only one default tab opened while for Maxthon I have around 10 tabs opened.

If you know some dirty trick for freeing some memory by minimizing the application, Firefox just have no effect with that trick. I don’t know how the developer code Firefox but I think 99% of Windows applications will clear their memory when minimized.

Actually I got a lot more to talk about this matter, but I don’t have enough time currently so, maybe I will continue my humble opinions later.

RightLoad, FTP Upload Never Been Easier

RightLoad, FTP Upload never been easier

If you own a web server or have been working with it, you must have been using some kind of FTP client to make your jobs done and your life easier. While full featured FTP client very useful for managing your FTP server and files, it is RightLoad come in handy when the situation is you just want to upload a small quantity of documents or images.

What is RightLoad?

RightLoad is a small program that allows you to quickly upload files directly from a Windows folder to your server. Instead of using a complicated FTP client just to upload a few pictures, you just right-click on the files, select the server and target folder and RightLoad will do the rest for you. When all files have been uploaded, RightLoad will automatically generate a list of different links to the files, ready to be copied into your post or website. [source: official RightLoad website]

How RightLoad work

Right is a context based application, that’s mean the best way of using it is by accessing to trough context menu (or mostly known as right click), but you still can run it the normal way by double clicking its icon and do drag and drop to start transfer.

rightload-from-context-menu

As you can see from the screenshot above, this is how we access RightLoad most of the time. You can select one file, multiple files, or even folder to upload.

When you first launch RightLoad, you will be prompted to fill a FTP account that will be used as default account. You can setup as many servers as you want and for each server you can also setup as many folders as you want under that specific server (like my screenshot above).

What make it different from normal FTP client?

The feature I love the most is it will format from FTP format to HTTP format. For example, let say you upload a file name logo.jpg to folder temporary, when uploaded you will get FTP format URL such as ftp://user:password@ftp.kuntau.net/public_html/temporary/logo.jpg then if you want to share whatever you uploaded with others you have to reformat the URL to http://kuntau.net/temporary/logo.jpg format, so they can view the document properly and for you not to reveal your login also!

rightload-offer-various-formatting-when-upload-completed

What RightLoad do for you is, it will automatically do the formatting for you and pre-highlighted it on upload complete so what only left for you is pressing ctrl + c to copy the URL.

As you can see from screenshot above also, it come predefined with several common tags for forum and website use such as [URL] tag, [IMG] tag, <a> and <img>. When you click any of this tag, the links on the left side will be converted to corresponding tag.

create-thumbnail-with-rightload

Another handy feature included is it will automatically detect if you are uploading image and it will offer you to create thumbnail for easy posting on website or forum. You can also specify default thumbnail size in the options menu.

That is what I can review about this marvelous tiny but useful freeware. If you are interested visit its download page and experience it yourself, it is free; nothing to lose on your side.