-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 83
About "Spock Vulcan" review on Chrome Web Store
Someone nicknamed "Spock Vulcan" left this review in the Chrome Web Store:
I hate to rate this so low, but as far as I could tell it didn't do anything besides add unnecessary delay to webpages. Each page's frame incurs a 200-1500ms delay before rendering/scripting begins. This makes pages take longer to initialize which subsequently affects network timing. (later note: even with settings disabled and blacklists removed, the browser is still impeded. Back to using /etc/hosts.)
This review is (suspiciously) pure nonsense. Everybody can find out by themselves. Here is the counter proof:
- Top screenshot is for HTTPSB in block-all/allow-exceptionally mode:
- DOMContentLoaded = 0.3 seconds (number of net requests = 108)
- Middle screenshot is for HTTPSB in allow-all/block-exceptionally mode:
- DOMContentLoaded = 1.11 seconds (number of net requests = 170)
- Bottom screenshot is without HTTPSB
- DOMContentLoaded = 1.57 seconds (number of requests = 291)
So HTTPSB did not "add unnecessary delay", but rather the opposite: it reduced unnecessary delay.
Click here for image in its original size.
Browser cache was cleared before each test.
One thing is for sure: HTTPSB gives full information to users about what web pages actually do and full control to users about what web pages are allowed to do.
HTTPSB is free, comes with no strings attached and no agenda. HTTPSB is significantly more efficient memory- and CPU-wise than any other comparable blockers I've measured so far.
It's bound to annoy some people who make a living (directly or indirectly) off the bloat.