But browsers are getting more assertive about displaying websites in ways that are good for those of us looking at them, not necessarily those publishing them. As browsers have increased in power, becoming full-fledged software foundations instead of just vessels for digital documents, memory usage has soared. Memory is a precious resource on laptops and phones, critical to everything a device does.
Brave cuts memory use by 33 percent to 66 percent compared with ordinary Chrome, the company said Friday. But the ad-blocking Brave browser has another reason to intervene: to free up memory and preserve your battery life.ĭetailed tests comparing Brave to Google's dominant Chrome browser, with and without the Adblock Plus and uBlock Origin ad-blocking extensions, show that blocking ads can help reduce browsers' ever-heavier use of precious computer memory on ad-heavy sites. You might run an ad blocker in your browser to cut website clutter and keep companies from tracking you online. Ad-blocking Brave also gives you a memory advantage, tests show.