Forum Discussion
Top feedback summary for September 24
it's got 4GB DDR3 and a 2nd gen i5 CPU.
Edge Canary performs very well on it, a lot better than Google Chrome. the laptop is generally old and a bit slow in nature because of old hardware but Edge Canary has never caused any memory issues. it's running Windows 10 1903 x64 pro.
HotCakeX "About memory optimization, I have Sony Vaio VPCEB3MFX. it's got 4GB DDR3 and a 2nd gen i5 CPU. Edge Canary performs very well on it, a lot better than Google Chrome. the laptop is generally old and a bit slow in nature because of old hardware but Edge Canary has never caused any memory issues. it's running Windows 10 1903 x64 pro."
I hope that you continue to have no issues, but your experience might not be universal, and probably is not considering the comments that others have made in the numerous discussions about high RAM usage on this forum (including discussions initiated by Microsoft personnel). The most recent is the "Memory Usage Comparison" series by Deleted.
High RAM usage is a known issue with Chromium-based browsers, including Edge Chromium, and is often commented upon in Google Chrome forums.
With Edge Chromium, it is not (apparently) unusual to find that RAM usage bumps up to 1-3gb during a day of normal browsing, as quite a number of folks have reported. I know that has been my experience over the months.
My computer (Dell XPS 8920, i7, 16gb) shows just over 2gb RAM used by Edge Chromium right now, after a day's normal browsing, opening and closing sites, running no extensions or flags, and with six tabs currently open:
That level of RAM usage is not a problem, obviously, on the computer I am now using, but Edge Chromium using 2gb of RAM on a 4gb computer would likely affect performance. Reasonable people might differ about that, but that is what I think. Enough said.
I avoid that on my 4gb laptop (Dell Inspiron 3180, A9-9420e, 4gb) by keeping no more than two tabs open at a time and by closing the browser reasonably frequently, which resets the clock, so to speak.
I am glad, as I said, that RAM usage has joined high CPU usage on the Edge Team's "Quality Area" list. I'm not sure how much Microsoft can do, given the way in which Chromium-based browsers handle processes, but any improvement would be welcome, in my opinion, anyway.