電子情報学特論: Chromium のアーキテクチャを解き明かす 〜 EEIC の授業が生きるプロダクトの世界〜 Kentaro Hara 2022 April (๑>ᴗ<๑) * * * *
CPU, GPU, Memory, and multi-process architecture In this 4-part blog series, we'll look inside the Chrome browser from high-level architecture to the specifics of the rendering pipeline. If you ever wondered how the browser turns your code into a functional website, or you are unsure why a specific technique is suggested for performance improvements, this series is for you. As part 1 of this serie
The Performance of Open Source Software High Performance Networking in Chrome Ilya Grigorik History and Guiding Principles of Google Chrome Google Chrome was first released in the second half of 2008, as a beta version for the Windows platform. The Google-authored code powering Chrome was also made available under a permissive BSD license–also known as the Chromium project. To many observers, this
Tom Wiltzius, Vangelis Kokkevis & the Chrome Graphics team updated May 2014 This code is changing due to Slimming Paint and thus there may be large changes in the future. Note also that some class names may have changed (e.g. RenderObject to LayoutObject, RenderLayer to PaintLayer). Summary This document provides background and details on the implementation of hardware-accelerated compositing in C
Introduction Web browsers are probably the most widely used software. In this book I will explain how they work behind the scenes. We will see what happens when you type 'google.com' in the address bar until you see the Google page on the browser screen. The browsers we will talk about There are five major browsers used today - Internet Explorer, Firefox, Safari, Chrome and Opera. I will give exam
October 16, 2014Optimizing the Critical Rendering Path Web pages are getting bigger and bigger in terms of consumed bandwidth and loaded assets (CSS, JS, images, fonts). The share of users who surf the web with mobile phones and tablets is increasing. Sure, at home you have your desktop computer with a really fast internet connection. Yet, a lot of people out there probably don’t visit your site w
Stay organized with collections Save and categorize content based on your preferences. Explore our growing collection of courses on key web design and development subjects. An industry expert has written each course, helped by members of the Chrome team. Follow the modules sequentially, or dip into the topics you most want to learn about.
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