I'm not convinced by Google Chrome. Yesterday, I did some testing and it took 3 times more memory than Firefox for the same webpages. Wasn't it supposed to use LESS memory?
When it first came out it was being compared with Firefox 2, which ate memory like nobody's business.
Mozilla worked hard to improve firefox's footprint, but at the end of the day, for both Chrome and Firefox users, when it comes to the tradeoff between speed and memory usage most ask for speed.
I don't know why people complain about memory usage though. 4GB of memory (maxes out 32 bit systems) is under $50 these days.
If you insist on a small memory footprint, modify your browsing habits and keep only one or two websites open at a time.
-Adam[/QUOTE]
It's not the memory usage itself - any program that uses more memory, will put more stress on your system on the whole since the memory constantly needs to be processed (especially if pages contain a lot of flash anims or adverts, even if they're unanimated). You notice a slow down, with the program being slower to respond. Chrome really slows down a lot more for me, when I'm downloading for example.
But unless Chrome can add all the important aspects of Firefox (auto-completion, plugin support for spell checking, adblocking, etc.) it's going to be a lite experience and I'm not looking for that. I have always preferred options and flexibility over style and stability (although Firefox is a lot more stable than it used to be).