Firefox freezes when using Audiogon


Anyone else same issue? Chrome works fine. 
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Showing 7 responses by almarg

No problem here. I am and have been using the latest version of Firefox, presently 44.0.2, running on Windows 7.

Also, while I’m not sure whether or not it may be relevant to the issue you are having, I’ll mention that on some sites I’ve found in the past that the responsiveness of Firefox can be slowed **drastically** if an advertisement or other content that is present on a site calls Adobe Flash Player into play. So I’ve set Firefox to ask for permission before enabling Flash.

Regards,
-- Al

Did you try running Firefox in safe mode, as DJohnson54 suggested?

Regards,
-- Al
 
Bombaywalla, is your Flash Player up to date, or at least not greatly out of date? For that matter, are your other plug-ins all up to date? That is easy to check in Firefox, as you are probably aware: Tools/Add-ons/Plug-ins/"Check to see if your plug-ins are up to date."

Also, try running Firefox in safe mode, as was suggested. If it works ok in that mode it most likely means that a plug-in or extension is causing the problem. You can then isolate which one is the culprit by disabling and re-enabling them (under Tools/Add-ons/Plug-ins or Tools/Add-ons/Extensions) until you zero in on which one precipitates the problem.

If there are a lot of plug-ins and/or extensions that are installed, the most efficient way of doing that would be with a binary search technique. Meaning disable half of them; see if the problem disappears; if it does it means that one in the disabled group is responsible; if it does not it means that one in the enabled group is responsible; then disable half of those in whichever group is responsible; and so on.

But the likeliest culprit based on my experience is Flash.

Best regards,
-- Al

Hi Bombaywalla,

I’d feel pretty certain that the out-of-date Adobe Reader is unrelated to the problem. And in fact I’m still using Adobe Reader XI, because when I briefly updated to DC some time ago I didn’t care for it (I don’t remember why).

Also, I’ve never bothered to "research" the plug-ins FF reports as unknown.

What I’d suggest that you do at this point is some combination of the following:

1)Under Tools/Add-ons/Plug-ins, change the setting for Flash from "always activate" to "ask to activate." Then only give it permission to activate when it is necessary to view something you want to see.

2)Under "Options," right next to the "ask to activate" setting for Flash, disable protected mode. See this writeup. (Although I have been running with protected mode in its default state of enabled, with no problems).

3)Try what DJohnson54 and I said about running in safe mode. As indicated in the link DJ provided, to start in safe mode just hold down the shift key while starting Firefox. As I indicated, if FF runs smoothly in safe mode it most likely means that a plug-in or extension is causing the trouble. Which particular plug-in or extension can be identified by selectively disabling them while running in normal mode.

Best regards,
-- Al

I'm running Win7 Pro 32-b (& i'm sure many others are as well) & I wonder why some of us are more adversely affected than others??
Yes, it’s strange. I’m running W7 Pro and Ultimate on my various computers, in both cases the 64 bit version.

As I mentioned earlier, though, within the past couple of years I used to have the same or very similar problems. Not at Audiogon, but at some newspaper and other sites that have a lot of Flash content. But those problems disappeared for me when I changed the Flash setting to "ask to activate," and/or as a result of updates to Flash, Firefox, and perhaps even Windows.

Best regards,
-- Al

Hmm.... I just checked for available updates (under FF’s Help menu) on two different computers, and it says that version 44.0.2 which I’m running is up to date. Also, at Mozilla.org the latest version that is available for download, at least in non-beta form, is 44.0.2.

I’m wondering if the popup you saw was not from Mozilla.org (from whence Firefox comes), but might have been from some semi-legitimate or illegitimate third party, for the purpose of installing adware or spyware.

It may be a good idea to take a look at the plug-ins and extensions that are now listed as being installed in Firefox, and see if any of them are new. In which case you can select for them to never activate.

It may also be a good idea to take a look at the list of programs that are installed on your computer, under Start/Control Panel/Uninstall a Program, and see if there is anything that looks unfamiliar or suspicious, in which case you can uninstall it. Google its name in cases of doubt.

Also, performing a "system restore" to an earlier date **might** allow you to get rid of the update. (Type "system restore" into the search box that appears near the start button, when you click that button). That won’t affect any of your data files or email files, but you would probably have to reinstall any programs or Windows updates that were installed subsequent to the date at which the restore point was created.

Finally, if necessary you could uninstall Firefox, and then download 44.0.2 from Mozilla.org and reinstall it. I’m not 100% certain, but I believe doing that would not affect your existing bookmarks, Firefox settings, cookies, stored passwords, etc, which are stored in a profile folder that is separate from the program folder.

Best regards,
-- Al

You’re very welcome, Bombaywalla. FWIW, though, I’ve never seen a Firefox security patch other than the ones that are incorporated in updates corresponding to changes in the version number of the program, such as 44.0.2.

Best regards,
-- Al