![]() Take a look at the number of processes Google Chrome uses, for example. Most modern applications work this way, to not block or slow down the UI process while working. Users should see much smoother performance in areas that are graphics intensive, like scrolling through long lists. ![]() CEF 3 also allows us to use hardware acceleration on graphics cards - like the latest browsers, it basically uses the computer's hardware both smarter and faster. ![]() From the release notes of v 0.9.4:ĬEF 1 was "single process" and if it got stuck doing something - the whole application would "suffer." CEF 3 is a "multi process" version - this means it can do more things at the same time, and if any single thing that it is doing slows down, the rest of the application can continue normally.
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