Comparing GPM – Web Browser to Chrome and Firefox

Speed Tips and Tricks for GPM – Web BrowserGPM – Web Browser can feel snappy when configured properly. This guide collects practical, actionable tips and explanations to help you squeeze better performance from GPM on both desktop and mobile. Each section focuses on a specific area — from startup and rendering to extensions and networking — so you can pick the optimizations that matter most for your setup.


1) Keep GPM up to date

Browsers regularly include performance improvements and bug fixes. Always run the latest stable release of GPM to benefit from engine optimizations, memory fixes, and security patches that indirectly improve speed.


2) Manage tabs deliberately

  • Close tabs you’re not using. Each open tab consumes CPU and memory.
  • Use tab suspension: if GPM supports built-in tab discarding or an official suspend feature, enable it to free resources for active tabs.
  • Group related tabs and use bookmarks or a reading list for long-term saving instead of keeping dozens open.

3) Limit and audit extensions

Extensions add functionality but often run background scripts that slow browsing.

  • Audit installed extensions and remove or disable anything you don’t use.
  • Prefer extensions from reputable developers and those that advertise lightweight operation.
  • Disable extensions on specific sites or use a browser profile dedicated to performance-sensitive tasks (e.g., streaming, gaming).

4) Tune content settings

  • Block autoplay media to avoid unnecessary CPU load from multiple videos playing simultaneously.
  • Disable heavy animations or experimental visual effects if GPM exposes those settings.
  • Use built-in ad and tracker blocking (or enable a performant content blocker) to reduce script-heavy ads that slow page loads.

5) Adjust privacy/security features strategically

Privacy features like strict tracker-blocking improve privacy but can sometimes increase CPU usage when scanning many requests. Balance the settings:

  • Use a high-performance blocking list (fewer, prioritized rules) if you need speed.
  • Consider allowing certain first-party scripts on trusted sites to reduce repeated blocking overhead.

6) Optimize network settings

  • Enable HTTP/2 or HTTP/3 (QUIC) if GPM supports them — these protocols deliver faster, multiplexed requests.
  • Turn on DNS-over-HTTPS only if your DNS resolver is fast; some slow resolvers can add latency.
  • Use a local DNS cache (OS-level or small DNS helper) to reduce lookup times for frequently visited domains.

7) Use hardware acceleration appropriately

Hardware acceleration offloads graphic and rendering tasks to the GPU, improving scroll and animation smoothness:

  • Enable hardware acceleration in GPM’s settings if available.
  • If you experience stuttering, try toggling the setting—on some systems a GPU driver bug can make software rendering faster.

8) Control background processes

Modern browsers can spawn multiple helper processes. Reduce resource use by:

  • Lowering the maximum process count if GPM offers that setting (fewer processes = less memory, but more tab isolation tradeoffs).
  • Disabling background apps or background sync for sites that don’t need it.

9) Use a lightweight profile or fresh profile for troubleshooting

If GPM becomes slow, create a new profile to test speed without extensions, cached data, or corrupted preferences. If the fresh profile performs much better, migrate bookmarks and settings incrementally to identify the cause.


10) Clear cache and site data selectively

A corrupted cache can slow page loads. Clear cache and site data for problem sites rather than doing a blanket wipe frequently. Use developer tools to inspect which resources are taking the longest to load.


11) Leverage built-in developer/performance tools

Use GPM’s performance profiler, network waterfall, and memory snapshots to identify slow scripts, large resources, or memory leaks. Targeted fixes often yield the best results.


12) Improve device performance

Browser speed is limited by the device:

  • Close heavy background applications (video editors, large VM instances).
  • Add more RAM if you frequently keep many tabs or run multiple browser profiles simultaneously.
  • On mobile, consider disabling battery-saver modes that throttle CPU for high-performance browsing tasks when you need speed.

13) Choose faster alternatives for heavy tasks

For web apps that are resource-heavy (e.g., IDEs, large spreadsheets), consider a dedicated desktop app or a different browser profile configured only for that web app to avoid interfering with general browsing.


14) Network environment and server-side factors

If pages are slow even with a fast setup, the bottleneck may be the server or your internet connection. Test with different networks, use traceroute or ping tests, and consider switching ISPs or using a reliable, low-latency VPN when necessary.


15) Regular maintenance habits

  • Restart GPM occasionally to clear accumulated processes and memory fragmentation.
  • Periodically review extensions, settings, and privacy lists.
  • Keep the OS and GPU drivers updated for best compatibility.

Conclusion Combine small changes across tabs, extensions, network, device, and settings to create a noticeably faster GPM experience. Start with the low-effort, high-impact steps (update browser, remove unused extensions, enable hardware acceleration) then use profiling tools for targeted fixes.

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