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This message was self-deleted by its author (AllaN01Bear) on Mon Sep 12, 2022, 07:01 AM. When the original post in a discussion thread is self-deleted, the entire discussion thread is automatically locked so new replies cannot be posted.
Tetrachloride
(8,447 posts)ad blocker will take care of most
usonian
(13,786 posts)Background.
Web designers are in love with gigantic amounts of javascript on web pages. Many pages are larger than early computer game apps were. That is why they are slow to load, besides the ads, which you should be blocking (IMO) to help speed things up, and slow to run. The large java scripts also eat up memory that the browser uses.
Older browser? Low on memory?
Browser extensions may also run slowly, but if you are not a computer geek, you probably will not have many, or any, installed.
The cure depends on your browser. Some will pop up a notice to let you let the script run or kill it. If the script is vital to the web page running, that makes the page useless.
Some browsers have extensions you can load to kill javascript on the current page (or globally). to be honest, some sites are vastly improved this way ... nag popups, damned cookie warnings and so on, go away. But some pages just refuse to work without javascrript. Twitter is the worst, and people keep posting links to twitter on DU. Others use javascript to actually create the text you see in the browser.
Regardless of what browser you use, these are some simple explanations.
https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/warning-unresponsive-script
https://www.computerhope.com/issues/ch001479.htm
Beyond that, it gets very technical.
There is a complexity bias in programming. Programmers feel that "simple is stupid" and jam the most complexity they can into web pages, when simple is actually beautiful. Just my opinion. Some load entire javascript libraries on each page, spare you the details.
SWBTATTReg
(24,085 posts)I totally agree!
It makes it far easier to maintain such code later on. The more complex the code, the harder it is to embed or add new code later on.
CloudWatcher
(1,923 posts)This can be caused by ...
1) the scripts on the website being poorly written (e.g. not your problem), or
2) your computer being slow to the point of not being able to work well (e.g. Malware or failing hardware ... very much your problem), or
3) your Internet connection being slow to the point of not working (your ISP's problem or your local network problem or your computer problem).
The browser (what is putting up that message) can't really tell which of the three situations is causing the problems, hence the somewhat less-than-stellar warning message.
So test with other sites (and other browsers), maybe reboot, and see if the problem persists. Most of the time it will vanish, but if you're unlucky there might be something for you to fix.