Some other related issues around Mac OS and CPU usage: Unless of course you think Firefox is using an abnormal amount of energy while it should be idle.īug 1430820 had a fix landed today (showing up in tomorrow's nightly i think?), which may impact power consumption for some Mac users. So I don't think it makes much sense to report spikes that are the result of some user action (or an active page running in the foreground). All these things cause CPU usage to go up and thus energy usage too. It can run JavaScript, embed Flash, play a movie, etc. ![]() That is totally normal when you load page or when the page 'does something. (What kind of pages are open, what is the active page, etc.) So this can be really difficult to assess without proper context. In case of a web browser it also heavily reflects the complexity and activity of the web page that is being opened or looked at. (I do not see this with Firefox 25 on a Retina MacBook Pro - But things may be different for other types of hardware) ![]() ![]() ![]() If, as the title of this bug suggests, Firefox is permanently listed in the Battery widget as a Energy Hungry app, then we indeed have a problem.
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