User talk:QwertyuMystiqs/Sandbox 56k friendly edition

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Yeah, you see, every time you type a character in your Wiki editing, Firefox saves it. It's unnoticeable in short pages like these, but there were 5 second pauses between each character in the huge 370K+ original sandbox. Internet Explorer does not do this, so I could edit my page a lot more quickly. And guess what, I actually use high speed broadband here at college. It actually takes less than 2 minutes here to download SRB2. –SonicMaster 14:17, 4 December 2007 (PST)

Then use Internet Explorer. Or better yet, use Avant Browser, the greatest browser ever. Srsly, I dont see the big deal about FireFox. I tried it once, and quite frankly, it sucked.

--§HoneyComb§

FIREFOX'D! Mwahaha. It's especially helpful for my unstable computer. My computer crashes roughly 2-3 times a day. Record in a day is like 8 or something. Whenever I'm doing something on the Internet and the computer crashes, Firefox remembers where I was. Internet Explorer hath not this feature. By the way, editing (not loading) a super-long wiki page causes problems in Firefox. 35K isn't a big deal at all, but 370K was.

Oddly enough, my computer actually stopped crashing when I started using Avant Browser. Srsly. --§HoneyComb§

Oddly enough, Firefox didn't change anything though in computer crash rates—still literally 100 times a month crashing like it does now. BLUE WARRIOR, TOLD YOU MY COMPUTER IS CRAPPIER THAN YOURS! Installing my XG soundcard last year altered the way my computer crashed. Blue screen of death is rare now; infinite lock-up is the most common way it crashes. Any version of Doom Builder will speed up the process. I'm always having to ask my friend to go on his computer so I can make levels... –SonicMaster 21:38, 8 December 2007 (PST)


The main drive behind Firefox is its security measures. Many see it as more secure than Internet Explorer, in part due to its community structure, and how found exploits are fixed at the drop of a pin (i.e. a week or so; one day for serious exploits). The next version of Internet Explorer, in contrast, will be released in one or two years. --Digiku talk 15:43, 4 December 2007 (PST)

It's updated twice within 40 days for me. Plus IE7 is said to be not that great with Blackboard, a website I have to use to do online college quizzes. –SonicMaster 15:51, 4 December 2007 (PST)

Like I said, Avant Browser is much better than either one. --§HoneyComb§