Step 1: Open Firefox and type about:config in the address bar where you normally
type a web address.
Step 2: Then click the button: “I’ll be careful, I promise”.
Step 3: In the filter bar below the address bar type network.http.
Step 4: Double-click on “network.http.pipelining” to change the setting from false to
true.
Step 5: Double-click on “network.http.proxy.pipelining” to change the value from
false to true.
Step 6: Double-click on “network.http.pipelining.maxrequests” and change the
number to “30″. This means it will make 30 requests at once.
(Normally the browser will make one request to a web page at a time. When you
enable pipelining it will make several at once, which really speeds up page loading.)
Step 7: Several lines above network.http.proxy.pipelining you’ll see
“network.http.max-persistant-connections-per-proxy” and
“network.http.max-persistant-connections-per-server”.
Double-click each line and change the value to “8″.
Step 8: Two lines up locate and double-click on “network.http.max-connections” and
set the value to “48″.
Step 9: Now right-click (control-click on a Mac) anywhere in the configuration (the
area where you’ve been making the changes). Select “New” then “Integer”.
Step 10: When prompted, copy and paste or type the following into the field
provided: nglayout.initialpaint.delay.
Step 11: When prompted to add a value, enter the number “0″. This value is the
amount of time the browser waits before it acts on information it recieves.
Step 12: Close all windows and tabs. The changes will take effect when you restart
Firefox.

This will be great if it works….I will do this…Thanx..
@sandeep – it will work.
However, the headline is misleading, it isn’t the computer that will work faster, but the connection to the Internet through FireFox.
Still this is a good guide for people on how to increase connection speed.
thanks and thanks Ixodoi for the clarification
wow this is great:)
I must give it a try
I also will try
good guide. thanks for the share
great share