Posted by Russell Eberhardt on 05/03/2020 10:51:19:
Posted by Neil Wyatt on 04/03/2020 20:00:59:
That's the stuff that gathers the data our advertisers ask for to justify continuing to advertise with us (and thereby pay for this website).
Neil.
That's all very well as long as it doesn't affect the useability of the site. It was fine until recently but something has changed and at least one of those trackers is introducing a problem, probably hogging resources. My laptop is reasonably powerful, not the latest but has a 2.5 gHz quad core processor and 4 GiB of ram. I'm not the fastest typist yet unless, I block the trackers, while typing the screen display is intermittently three or more characters behind what I type which can be most confusing. What's more the mouse cursor follows the the mouse movement in jerks so it's difficult to position it.
…
Not complaining, just trying to be helpful as I guess a lot of readers block trackers as some browsers have some tracking protection built in making it easier.
Russell
I've been investigating recently due to email and browser problems on the machine I'm using at the moment. My issue involves missing network packets, packets out of sequence, unseen segments, duplicate acknowledges and Resets. These can all happen in normal operation, but I'm seeing too many of them.
The visible symptom is intermittently slow web pages, and email login failures. Looking at network traffic I see tracking sites often feature in these failed transactions, and that the jitter sometimes disrupts name resolution. It may take a few attempts for my computer to get a websites network address from its name, and this slows everything down. My current theory is ad-block and privacy settings are partly blocking tracking conversations, allowing them to start, but then blasting chunks out in mid-flight! This could be causing the network stutter I'm monitoring, but is unproven.
Another cause of stuttering would be the tracker server failing to respond due to a fault at their end. I don't think it's them because 4 or more are misbehaving at the same time.
Another likely cause is a machine low on RAM. The amount of RAM a modern browser consumes has bloated significantly over time. On my 16Gb computer Firefox with 4-tabs open uses 3.4Gb of RAM, while Chromium doing the same consumes slightly less, about 3.2Gb Pretty greedy, but gobbling RAM is an easy way of improving browser performance.
On a machine with plenty of RAM, the operating system allows Firefox and Chrome/Chromium to spread their wings and leave all their working parts in RAM ready for instant access. On smaller machines, the operating system and browser ration RAM, which takes time. Anything not in use is unloaded immediately, and has to be reloaded when needed again. This can get completely out of hand, with exponentially worse delays if the operating system spends more time managing memory than doing useful work – 'thrashing'. Peter Shaw mentioned in the other thread that his computer has only 2Gb of RAM: in 2020 I'd recommend at least 4Gb.
Before deciding a problem is due to a particular Browser (Edge vs Chrome vs Firefox etc), or Operating System (Windows XP, Vista 7, 8 / 10 vs Linux vs Android vs OS/X) it's worth knowing that sudden changes in performance are often due to network faults, many of which are temporary, or fixed by rebooting the router.
On the subject of trackers, I'm not sure how it's going to end. Ketan and Neil have a legitimate need for tracking, and I don't have a problem with their reasons or trustworthiness. Unfortunately, not everyone on the internet is as cuddly as them! Tracking is a serious privacy intrusion and security risk. For that reason this is one of the few sites I open the door too. Otherwise, I'm with Frances in taking active defensive measures.
Dave