Android Advisor

How to speed up browsing in Android

Two great ways to supercharg­e your Android smartphone- or tablet's web browser

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To an extent the dream of a mobile webbrowsin­g device has become something of a nightmare. Despite the proliferat­ion of mobile-, adaptive- and responsive websites, browsing on an Android phone or tablet can be a slow, laggy and buggy affair. It doesn't have to be. In this article we look at one useful tweak that allows you to add greater memory allocation to the Chrome browser, making it a faster web-surfing experience. And we also offer a couple of tips for getting the Android Browser to play more nicely. Here is speed up Android browsing.

Allocate more memory to Chrome browser

This works only on the Chrome browser, which you may have to access from within the 'Google' section of your home page.

Open a new Chrome tab and type into the URL bar: chrome://flags/#max-tiles-for-interest-area

You should see a warning about experiment­al features in Chrome, and beneath it a list of such features. Scroll down until you find 'Maximum tiles for interest area', which should be highlighte­d. Click the drop-down and you will see several options on a menu dialog. We could see 'Default', '64', '128', '256' and '512'. As you might expect the numbers refer to the amount of memory set aside for the web browser. Switching up to 512MB from the default 128MB should speed up the web browser.

Once you have selected the required amount of RAM, you will be invited to 'Relaunch now'. Do so and Chrome will relaunch with the new memory allocation. You should find that pages load much more quickly. And you can reverse the process if for any reason the new allocation causes problems.

Disable Javascript (and Flash) on the Android browser

Unlike the Chrome tweak outlined on the previous page, these changes require you to lose some functional­ity. But given that this functional­ity is Flash and Javascript, you may not be too upset. You are in essence using an ad blocker on your mobile browser.

Turning off JavaScript will significan­tly speed up web browsing on all Android devices, but it will also make some web pages look plain and lifeless. You could care less.

To disable Javascript on your Android, open up the Browser, and hit the three dot 'Menu' icon in the top righthand corner. Choose Advanced, and then scroll down to 'Enable JavaScript'. Untick this option and you should see speed improvemen­ts, in particular on desktop websites that haven't been optimised for mobile devices.

Flash is an option only on older Androids, so it probably isn't important for you. But if it is on your handset you probably do want to disable it - and you have nothing to lose from looking to see what is going on. To do so, go into the Android browser, select the menu icon and choose Advanced. If you can see an 'Enable plugins', it is likely your browser is utilising a Flash plugin. So untick that option. You should see immediate speed dividends.

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