Give your Mozilla Firefox a speed boost - easiest way to speed up your Firefox
This short tutorial will walk you through to 5 easy steps to speed up your Google Chrome browser by enabling Hardware Acceleration and Pre-Rendering of webpages. If you used to frequent a lot to graphic-intensive websites (e.g. YouTube) at slow shared internet connection, this post is for you.Follow this step-by-step guide on how to speed up your Chrome browser by enabling hardware acceleration and pre-rendering:
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh-XvFjFt7l60erUXJOzOE0aOq8QEZ8uqui9a4up80YXZHkyMbeGmwO0tDCpZ5yfIc-tc1ch9RkOiAoQvsyfCuQD4CsSg2lPq0wmRSZ_WXLDF7plZX4-m5Q5-OxMhP_f3kruVCqnmrQCQQ/s320/enable-hardware-acceleration-google-chrome-800x800-740396.jpg)
Step 2 Scroll down and click on enable link under GPU Accelerated Compositing
Step 3 Just below that, also click on enable link under GPU Accelerated Canvas 2D.
Note: If you're using Chrome 11, 'GPU Accelerated Compositing' is activated by default. For Mac users, you can only enable GPU Accelerated Compositing; GPU Accelerated Canvas 2D is not yet available.
Step 4 Scroll down a little, and click on enable Web Page Prerendering.
Step 5 Finally, hit the Restart button at the bottom of the page.
You're done!