But the Gecko support does at least mean you get similar performance to Firefox: our page-rendering test took 5.26 seconds (compared to 7.09 seconds for IE7), and memory usage was just 25,268KB.
What it didn’t do was pick up an existing Firefox bookmarks file on our test system, offering only to import the IE and Opera ones it found. This means you get the same across-the-board standards compliance, the same compatibility with most modern web pages, and the same support for Firefox 2 extensions. Firefox users will feel at home, as Netscape has turned to the Gecko page-rendering engine that drives Firefox.