Stop using a browser that violates user freedom and privacy!
Stop using a browser that violates user freedom and privacy!
Stop using a browser that violates user freedom and privacy!
I don't really understand why more people don't use Firefox. I've been using it almost exclusively for probably a decade without any compatibility issues, aside from the very few sites that specifically request IE or Edge (which I usually just bypass by changing User Agent anyway).
I have been daily driving firefox for a long time too. The other day at work a very heavy site that is a full blown application wouldn't work properly so I had to use chrome for it. I ended up using it for a while during the day and I must admit everything was so much snappier than I was used to. I would never use Chrome but I'm now thinking about testing ungoogled chromium. I just find it hard to let go of my user styles.
One thing you'll often see is that "new" browsers - i.e. with no browser history, extensions, etc. - perform better than one you've been using for a while. Thus, when people switch browsers, the new one tends to feel faster, regardless of what you're switching to.
Possibly, Firefox feels just as fast after a refresh. Alternatively, a fresh profile using the new profile manager might do the same.
On the other hand, it could also be that that specific site has just been tested and optimised in Chrome, with Firefox mostly ignored because too few people use it :(
I've been on Android since 1.5 and the "snappy" claims remind me a lot of the claims every new version there too. They're likely still going, though I haven't been active on XDA for a long time to know.
Is it actually objectively faster? Or is it a perception thing based on the way animations and screen changes are handled?
yup. as someone who used firefox in the "wasn't yet called firefox"-day, switched to chrome when it came available on linux, and then had to switch back to firefox a year ago: chrome feels just so. much. snappier.
It's hard to describe, but everything just feels... slightly off
You can try cromite, I think it has a version for PCs
What do you mean by change User Agent?
The user agent tells the page what the browser is, so the page can tell whether you're runnit Chrome, Firefox, Safari, etc. The intent is for the page to change behavior depending on the browser since each have different capabilities (web standards change quickly). Unfortunately, pages rarely get updated in a timely fashion when browsers implement web standards so the engine check is frequently inaccurate.
Changing the user agent means changing what web pages think you're running. If a page uses an optimized API on Chrome and a slower one on Firefox because Firefox was slower to implement it, then you can get a speedup by saying your Firefox is Chrome. Some pages refuse to run unless it's a specific browser, so lying can make those pages work.
I hope that makes sense.
I'd say it's because it's not a default on the most popular operating systems (Windows, MacOS, Android systems, iOS).
How would a typical user discover Firefox?
One thing I don’t like about Firefox is that its security is not great compared to Chromium. It has less sandboxing and weaker sandboxing.
Firefox sandboxing is especially bad on Android and Linux.
They they do make up for it a tiny bit with better support for ad blocking, which lowers the chance of landing on malicious changes.
Though realistically not many people care about security when choosing a browser. They use old versions and resist the prompts to upgrade.
I run Firefox with uBlock Origin in my work as well as private device for > 2 years without any issues including tricky applications like Citrix, Virtual Desktops etc.
On my mobile, I use Fennec with uBlock Origin, Decentraleyes and PrivacyBadger and sometimes have some small issues, so I have to view the page in Desktop mode instead.
But compared to a web full of ads, it's a difference like day and night. Definitely won't go back any time soon!
Did you tried ironfox it has a lot of improvements.
Today "This extension is no longer supported" doesn't mean there's something seriously wrong with it, it means "Google doesn't support the fact you want to use it".
I've never switched away from Firefox. I never liked Chrome.
Switched over to librewolf last night finally after chrome told me I couldn’t use AdNauseam anymore, no regrets, it’s better in every way.
I'll be interested to see how this affects Chrome's market share over time
Honestly Firefox and it's forks are really slow on android. I still use it anyway.
huh, i've always felt it's pretty good on android
Slower than crime downloading MB of ads all the time?
IDK but I'm fine on FF (new phone had slowdowns til I did disable the android efficiency thingy so FF doesn't reload pages 😍)
Edit : autocorrect changed crome to crime. Keeping it.
I rarely feel the need for a mobile browser to be "fast". If a website is somehow slow on Firefox, I just close it.
It's been a while since I tried Samsung Browser, but I recall that it was very fast and also supported ad blocking.
I use Firefox on Android because I like syncing tabs to my desktop.
So stop using a browser that uses Google WebExtensions altogether. Gotcha. So other than Links, Pale Moon, Basilisk, and SeaMonkey, any suggestions?
Ironwolf.