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Firefox or Safari? What do you use?
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Senior User
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Hi everyone. I was wondering, do you Firefox, Safari, or another browser. Just curious.
1 Firefox
2. Safari
3. Another Browser
4. Firefox and Safari
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Chris K.
White MacBook and iPod Nano 3rd Generation
Experienced Mac User
Don't hold me accountable for jokes-I have a lousy sense of humor!
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I've used Firefox basically since its inception, and love it. I usually "test run" new builds of browsers to see what new bells and whistles they have, but Firefox maintains the top spot in my rotation.
I'll give Safari 4 a spin when it's out of beta, however, and if it offers any advantage to Firefox (which I don't really see so far), I might use it more often.
*EDIT* :
Ok, I downloaded and installed Safari 4 beta. We'll see how it performs...
(
Last edited by harbinger75; Mar 27, 2009 at 05:02 PM.
)
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I simply like Safari.
I'm used to it.
Firefox is good, too, but you need to switch on color management, which is off by default.
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Firefox. There are a few extensions that I find absolutely essential, and the Safari mechanism of repurposing the Inputmanager mechanism is too hacky for my taste - especially as it will die as soon as Safari goes 64-bit.
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Still OmniWeb for me.
Occasionally, I use Safari for quick access to something as it launches faster, but there isn't anything about it that I prefer with the exception of the Find facility. Firefox, very, very rarely.
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I still use Camino, but I would say that it's primarily out of inertia.
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Firefox is my main browser but I have other browsers installed and use them every so often. I do update them and test out new versions to see if I like them because I'm not a Firefox fanboy, but currently it's the browser I like the most. So basically I always try out other browsers but I find that I keep coming back to Firefox. It's not perfect but I like it well enough to pick it over other browsers.
The browsers I have currently installed are Firefox, Safari, Camino, Opera, and I had Shiira installed in the past.
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I had been using Firefox almost exclusively. However, lately it seems like I get more and more scrolling "stutters" and spinning pinwheels when just browsing ordinary pages. Besides that, Firefox causes CPU usage to go through the roof, killing my MBP's battery life. Activity Monitor sometimes indicates that Firefox, just sitting there and not doing anything, uses more CPU than Parallels!
I'm liking the Safari 4 beta, though I hate the location of the stop/reload button and that the "Reopen all windows from last session" is not, to me at least, as dependable as FF's Save & Quit. There aren't really any FF extensions that I miss.
My $.02.
Steve
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Celebrating 10 years and 4000 posts on MacNN!
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I use Firefox everywhere.
I really need to find a way to force it to start a new instance of the app when I get over a certain number of tabs...at the moment I have like sixty tabs open across five windows, and I'm sucking nearly 700MB RAM.
I'd love to switch to Chrome on my Windows machines, but I can't live without my extensions. (Plus I hate it when apps don't follow the host operating system's UI conventions and theme engine....)
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Originally Posted by shifuimam
(Plus I hate it when apps don't follow the host operating system's UI conventions and theme engine....)
Yep.
Strike one against Firefox on Mac OS.
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I use Safari, because Firefox feels completely fake, like the interface will break if I try to do anything too fancy with it. I know their theming engine makes porting easy, but geez, you don't have to make it so obvious that you're covering up a Windows-based theme.
EDIT: Oh, and it fails to support custom keyboard shortcuts, and provides no interface of its own to do so.
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After just one day of using Safari 4 beta, I can say that I do like it. The only element I'm having a bit of trouble getting used to is the tab change. At this point (early in the testing process), I'm having trouble with the change in location of the tab bar. I can say honestly that I liked the tab bar where it was before. It was much more immediately noticeable than the new incarnation.
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I still don't understand why the appearance of the browser skin is high up on people's priority lists.
I use Firefox because as a web developer, I simply cannot live with Firebug, the Web Developer extension, and others. Safari does have support for embedded font delivery now, and CSS shadows, so it has its place too.
Speaking of which, IE 8 was just released. I know the whole "compatibility mode" it introduces is probably necessary, but man it feels like such an awkward hack, and it seems to not play with parts of the Prototype Javascript API.
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Originally Posted by besson3c
I still don't understand why the appearance of the browser skin is high up on people's priority lists.
I'm not a web developer, so browser behavior and appearance matters to me as much as functionality and reliability. I am a writer/blogger/graphics guy on the off-days from my full-time job, so I go back and forth between a browser and my workspaces frequently (for screenshots, general info, etc.). If I can't navigate a browser efficiently, it doesn't make much sense to use it.
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Originally Posted by besson3c
I still don't understand why the appearance of the browser skin is high up on people's priority lists.
Yeah, right. And why do people like pretty girls, when the ugly fat ones can do so much more cooking? You can always put lots of lipstick on them if you don't like the default look.
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Originally Posted by besson3c
I still don't understand why the appearance of the browser skin is high up on people's priority lists.
I use Firefox because as a web developer, I simply cannot live with Firebug, the Web Developer extension, and others. Safari does have support for embedded font delivery now, and CSS shadows, so it has its place too.
Safari 4 has a built in inspector that replaces everything I used Firebug for, too... so that's another strike against Firefox. And even if I didn't care about the browser skin (and it's wayyy more than the skin, the actual way things function is often contrary to every other native Mac app) the Gecko rendering engine, in my eyes, is inferior to Webkit, at the very least in what it supports.
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Clinically Insane
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Originally Posted by TETENAL
Yeah, right. And why do people like pretty girls, when the ugly fat ones can do so much more cooking? You can always put lots of lipstick on them if you don't like the default look.
I'm not entirely sure that analogy *really* works in your favor, tetenal...
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Originally Posted by adamfishercox
Safari 4 has a built in inspector that replaces everything I used Firebug for, too... so that's another strike against Firefox. And even if I didn't care about the browser skin (and it's wayyy more than the skin, the actual way things function is often contrary to every other native Mac app) the Gecko rendering engine, in my eyes, is inferior to Webkit, at the very least in what it supports.
Will the inspector allow you to position elements using your cursor for use with background image sprites?
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I don't even quite know what that means... so I'm not sure. But I never use it:
replaces everything *I* used Firebug for
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Originally Posted by harbinger75
I'm not a web developer, so browser behavior and appearance matters to me as much as functionality and reliability. I am a writer/blogger/graphics guy on the off-days from my full-time job, so I go back and forth between a browser and my workspaces frequently (for screenshots, general info, etc.). If I can't navigate a browser efficiently, it doesn't make much sense to use it.
See, this is where these sorts of arguments always seem to fall apart. You cannot equate the aesthetic appearance to usability unless you actually make this connection. Better looks does not equal better usability, the two are NOT the same thing, despite the frequency of this word being misused.
Better aesthetics can provide a better user experience, and they can contribute to better usability, but this is not a given - it is possible to have a very pretty looking interface that is difficult to figure out and use efficiently - for instance, if an icon looks really kick ass but is too small, too difficult to find, or requires too much mouse activity to click on...
What I'm saying has nothing to do with usability, but purely with the aesthetics which people here love to fixate on while not giving the subject of usability the attention it often deserves. I don't understand how the aesthetics of the browser skin itself really is valued above all of the other attributes of a good browser:
- stability
- use of resources
- speed
- standards support
- features/customization
- usability
- compatibility
etc.
Why is it that aesthetics usually seems to show up in discussion before many of these other things?
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- stability
I find Safari more stable and faster under multiple tabs.
- use of resources
Never really tested this, but Safari seems to have less of an impact (Firefox can freeze everything for a few seconds while it launches multiple tabs)
- speed
Safari, hands down.
- standards support
Also Safari/webkit, though it's not like Firefox trails greatly in that regard.
- features/customization
Firefox wins here, but I never use any of their add-ons, so for me it doesn't matter.
- usability
On the Mac, Safari is by far the more usable, as it actually works like the rest of the apps on the system.
- compatibility
With what? I would assume that means standards support, etc.
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Originally Posted by harbinger75
After just one day of using Safari 4 beta, I can say that I do like it. The only element I'm having a bit of trouble getting used to is the tab change. At this point (early in the testing process), I'm having trouble with the change in location of the tab bar. I can say honestly that I liked the tab bar where it was before. It was much more immediately noticeable than the new incarnation.
I used the new tab position in Safari 4 for a few days. But I still prefer the tabs below the bookmarks bar. Safari 4 buddy and Safari 4 Modifier are quick and easy ways to restore the tabs to the position below the bookmarks bar, turn off the "Google Suggest" feature added to Safari 4, and turn on/off several other features.
Here's what Safari 4 Modifier looks like:
http://www.swoon.net/site/software.html
http://ahatfullofsky.comuv.com/Engli...s/S4M/S4M.html
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adam: all fair comments... I mostly use Firefox because of what I do, but I did not mean to criticize Safari in these other aspects. It has come a long way and has earned my respect.
In terms of your comment about usability, how exactly is Safari more usable? What you've written is rather vague, no?
By compatibility I meant handing quirks mode and playing well both with pages that are properly coded and adhere to standards, as well as those that don't. I'm not suggesting that a good browser should bend over backwards to work with crappy coded sites, but obviously a little bit of flexibility is necessary.
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Note that I'm only talking about Firefox on the Mac here. I think Firefox on the PC is the best browser hands down. The work they've done to make it more "Mac-like", however, just sucks.
Firefox's interface elements feel faked (and they are.) For instance, when Firefox opens, it takes a second for the address bar to "load." The fake unified titlebar is crappy because though it appears that you can grab and drag from anywhere, you cannot, because the actual toolbar is not "real." It doesn't respect any customized shortcuts, the maximize button actually maximizes, which is a real pain in the ass, etc. etc.
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Originally Posted by adamfishercox
I don't even quite know what that means... so I'm not sure. But I never use it:
If you care to know, you know how people used to slice up navigation buttons into separate image files? You know how much of a pain this is when you want to add a button and sometimes resize everything to fit if each button isn't the same width?
Using CSS background-images you can work with a single image as your navigation bar, and in this single image also include the mouseover states for each button. Then, when you mouseover the button (and you can set the clickable regions using CSS and anchor tags where the text doesn't appear on the page due to a text-indent attribute), the :hover pseudo class includes a background-position attribute to show the mouseover state of the button.
Firebug is used for determining those background-position coordinates, as well as absolute positions for your anchor tags.
It takes a little practice, but it is *much* faster to just drop in a new nav bar graphic and then sort out the coordinates than it is to mess around with individual images, and it is less tedious too.
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Oh, that's actually really useful... +1 Firebug then
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I also like Firebug's console/logging console.log(), CSS3 selector support - i.e. $$('#someid .someclass'), live CSS tweaking, network log (great for tracking what variables are being sent w. AJAX requests), and CSS inheritance inspection.
I haven't looked at the new Safari or IE 8 dev tools to see how much is possible there.
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Originally Posted by DCJ001
that fixes the two things that bugged me in Saf4, the dumbass tabs and loosing the blue progress bar. Could move from FF now.
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Safari, but I'm a basic web browser, I can see why devs love FF because of the wealth of add-ons.
Safari runs faster on my C2D, uses less RAM (even though both can eat up quite a bit if left running for a while), and doesn't show me the pinwheel of doom. I also prefer the way Safari renders text, FF always seems choppy to me.
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I use Firefox - couldn't live without extensions either.
I get about two crashes a week when I'm at work - but that's due to an issue in the LogMeIn Rescue plugin.
It only gets manually closed if I'm rebooting the PC or it wants to do an update.
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Originally Posted by besson3c
See, this is where these sorts of arguments always seem to fall apart. You cannot equate the aesthetic appearance to usability unless you actually make this connection. Better looks does not equal better usability, the two are NOT the same thing, despite the frequency of this word being misused.
Better aesthetics can provide a better user experience, and they can contribute to better usability, but this is not a given - it is possible to have a very pretty looking interface that is difficult to figure out and use efficiently - for instance, if an icon looks really kick ass but is too small, too difficult to find, or requires too much mouse activity to click on...
What I'm saying has nothing to do with usability, but purely with the aesthetics which people here love to fixate on while not giving the subject of usability the attention it often deserves. I don't understand how the aesthetics of the browser skin itself really is valued above all of the other attributes of a good browser:
- stability
- use of resources
- speed
- standards support
- features/customization
- usability
- compatibility
etc.
Why is it that aesthetics usually seems to show up in discussion before many of these other things?
Ok, apparently we're saying the same thing, but in different ways. Let me clarify and reaffirm my position so you can see that my point is very valid despite terminology being misconstrued.
I really couldn't give two craps about what colors Apple uses for the Safari browser, nor do I care if the scroll bars are Aqua, brushed metal or adorned with the likenesses of the Village People. What I DO care about is the ability for my workflow to, well, flow.
Not once did I use the word "aesthetics" in my post, so I'm not sure to what you're referring. I did, however, say "appearance," which might have misled you. My reference was to the physical layout of any browser I use; where the buttons are located, where menus can be found, what preferences can be set and which ones cannot...that sort of thing.
If I used that word improperly, I apologize, but the aforementioned opinion is how I feel about it. I wholeheartedly agree about the attributes of a good browser. Those elements are very high on my priority list, but all browsers have one thing in common: they need a GUI front-end to accomplish their mission.
Again, I couldn't care less about colors and the like, but I can say that if I were going to try to get a soda from a vending machine, I certainly wouldn't look twice at the machine without buttons, a coin slot or any discernible way to actually obtain the soda.
So, in essence, we're saying the same thing, I just chose verbiage that differed from yours.
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Originally Posted by DCJ001
I used the new tab position in Safari 4 for a few days. But I still prefer the tabs below the bookmarks bar. Safari 4 buddy and Safari 4 Modifier are quick and easy ways to restore the tabs to the position below the bookmarks bar, turn off the "Google Suggest" feature added to Safari 4, and turn on/off several other features.
Here's what Safari 4 Modifier looks like:
http://www.swoon.net/site/software.html
http://ahatfullofsky.comuv.com/Engli...s/S4M/S4M.html
Thank you for that information!
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Originally Posted by besson3c
I haven't looked at the new Safari or IE 8 dev tools to see how much is possible there.
http://webkit.org/blog/197/web-inspector-redesign/
It all means nothing to me, but you might take a look at what webkit offers.
(It appears Safari 4 has the same inspector.)
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Originally Posted by harbinger75
Ok, apparently we're saying the same thing, but in different ways. Let me clarify and reaffirm my position so you can see that my point is very valid despite terminology being misconstrued.
I really couldn't give two craps about what colors Apple uses for the Safari browser, nor do I care if the scroll bars are Aqua, brushed metal or adorned with the likenesses of the Village People. What I DO care about is the ability for my workflow to, well, flow.
Not once did I use the word "aesthetics" in my post, so I'm not sure to what you're referring. I did, however, say "appearance," which might have misled you. My reference was to the physical layout of any browser I use; where the buttons are located, where menus can be found, what preferences can be set and which ones cannot...that sort of thing.
If I used that word improperly, I apologize, but the aforementioned opinion is how I feel about it. I wholeheartedly agree about the attributes of a good browser. Those elements are very high on my priority list, but all browsers have one thing in common: they need a GUI front-end to accomplish their mission.
Again, I couldn't care less about colors and the like, but I can say that if I were going to try to get a soda from a vending machine, I certainly wouldn't look twice at the machine without buttons, a coin slot or any discernible way to actually obtain the soda.
So, in essence, we're saying the same thing, I just chose verbiage that differed from yours.
Sorry, I just used this as a launch off point, because conflating aesthetics/user experience with usability occurs fairly frequently here.
I'm not sure what setting preferences has to do with appearance, but I think I get your gist, you mean the basic overall GUI design of the app.
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Originally Posted by besson3c
Sorry, I just used this as a launch off point, because conflating aesthetics/user experience with usability occurs fairly frequently here.
I'm not sure what setting preferences has to do with appearance, but I think I get your gist, you mean the basic overall GUI design of the app.
Yes, that is basically the meat of the situation. I guess I was attempting to use preference settings as a segue to GUI control and overall usability.
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I use Safari pretty much all the time but some time in the last couple of months, it stopped rendering PDF statements from chase.com. When I need to grab a statement, I have to to Firefox.
QS
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I have to admit, I'm really getting used to the UI tweaks in Safari 4, and by using keyboard shortcuts, the top-tab issue isn't much of an issue anymore.
In the few days I've been using the beta, I've enjoyed what I've seen, and haven't really had any problems to speak of with daily browsing, document fetching, sending forms, etc. I've actually taken Firefox off my dock so as to not entice me for the time being.
If it stays stable and some small issues are fixed by release, this will be my primary browser for sure.
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since i have more than 1 computer running 10.3 newer versions of firefox & safari won't work for me. yahoo doesn't like older browsers. stumbling across opera was a life saver for me. or at least an operating system saver.
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imac g3 600
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Firefox 3.6 betas here. Quick... and new font smoothing =)
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I use Firefox mainly, but I also use Safari and Camino. Haven't really played with Opera, but what I've seen hasn't lit a fire under me to try it.
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Added one more for OmniWeb as main browser, with Camino and Opera on the side.
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Now that I have Snow Leopard on my MBP I've noticed that the finger gestures are different in Safari and Firefox. Safari doesn't do the three finger swipe up and down to go to the top and bottom of a web page. Firefox does and I love this feature. In Camino it does a page up and down function rather than go to top/bottom of the page. Before I was using the keyboard shortcuts but the trackpad gestures are super convenient because I use this feature all the time.
They both do the other gestures like 3 finger side to side to go back and next web page and 2 finger scroll up and down, but for some reason Safari doesn't do the go to the top/bottom three finger gesture. I'm using the most update final releases of each browser.
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Switched from Safari to Firefox (whose Javascript console is pretty good).
Only problem I have is bookmarking. Also, the access to earlier stages of history demands more clicks than Safari.
Other than that, I only rarely use Opera, never Camino.
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Mac Elite
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Originally Posted by Veltliner
Switched from Safari to Firefox (whose Javascript console is pretty good).
Only problem I have is bookmarking. Also, the access to earlier stages of history demands more clicks than Safari.
Other than that, I only rarely use Opera, never Camino.
This is what I wrote before upgrading to Snow Leopard.
As Firefox 3.5.5 messes up the colors/is not usable under Snow Leopard, I have to go back to Safari.
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Addicted to MacNN
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: FFM
Status:
Offline
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Clinically Insane
Join Date: Mar 2001
Location: yes
Status:
Offline
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Firebug is the ultimate Javascript console, nothing else touches it, including both Safari's dev/inspector stuff as well as IE's.
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Mac Elite
Join Date: Jul 2000
Location: Dallas, TX, USA
Status:
Offline
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I use Safari because one of the big things I do on the internet is research information on some topic... and all that info I capture by emailing it to myself... and then organize into a hierarchy of email folders. Almost everything important is organized into my email. Not just the links I find... but the content, so that if it goes away, I still have the info I need captured... with leading commentary, of course, so I know why I captured it.
With Safari, I can copy a portion of a web page and paste it into an email and it looks just like it did on the web page... that is HUGE for me.
I think Firefox is good... just not too good at that. I only use Firefox for websites that don't work properly with Safari... so maybe once a month I'll pull up something in Firefox.
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Mac Nut since before color Macs, working for UT Austin Microcenter supporting Mac users
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Fresh-Faced Recruit
Join Date: Nov 2009
Status:
Offline
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Firefox is my main browser but I have other browsers installed and use them regularly I do update them and test out new versions to see if I like them because I'm not a Firefox fanboy, but currently it's the browser I like the most. So basically I always try out other browsers but I find that I keep coming back to Firefox. It's not perfect but I like it well enough to pick it over other browsers.
The browsers I have currently installed are Firefox, Safari, Chrome
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