I've pretty much switched to chrome for all daily browsing, with the exception being on Linux, where the builds don't yet handle flash as well as Firefox.
With that said, I'm missing two features that I've become accustomed in Firefox:
1 Reason I Was Forced to Overcome My Chrome Addiction:
It keeps freezing, requiring a power-off restart, with more than about twenty-five tabs. Sad to say, both FF and IE8 are much more stable with lots of tabs.
I don't use other browsers much (IE8 sometimes at work), but I'll add Opera 10 (and 9 iirc) to the list of browsers that can stably handle lots of tabs. Memory usage gets a bit crappy but nothing crashes.
Interface-wise, Firefox also wins in the "huge numbers of tabs" department; Tree-Style Tabs is an absolute must for anyone using 50-100+ tabs regularly.
I like how Chrome is more stable and uses less resources then Firefox. Does not crash on me like FF does.
Though it is not my default browser - yet. I'd definitely switch when they have same add-ons and it with such added it remains stable/does not crash. One can hope...
Number 1 reason I don't use chrome:
It (google) tries to impose it's will and existence on me.
Through paid articles like the linked one.
"1. Ludicrous Speed for fast fingers."
Same can be done in firefox using ctrl-c, ctrl-k, ctrl-v, alt-enter
"2. Each Tab is its own Process"
That might actually be a good thing to implement in firefox.
Although what he mentions has never happened to me. In my experience firefox rarely crashes.
"3. No bothersome updates on every other launch"
What he said. It can be turned off. Altough I haven't cause i find it to be a good thing. Yet another thing which runs itself. Though "sometimes you just want to check gmail and check it fast" (notice how the author says "check gmail" and not "check your email" or some other just-want-to-do-it-fast task) and if firefox starts talking about updates I just click skip/cancel and go on with it. Still fairly fast.
Most certainly this is not a point that rates high in my change-browser?-checklist.
"4. The stay-out-of-your-way look"
My firefox is themed to be uber minimalistic.
URL-bar, searchbar and a bookmarkbar consisting only of icons.
"5. Downloading…"
I just like the way all downloads are accessible through one dedicated window/area.
[+] [-] joeyo|16 years ago|reply
With that said, I'm missing two features that I've become accustomed in Firefox:
1. ctrl-1, ctrl-2, etc for switching tabs.
2. Forward-slash for searching
[+] [-] rg|16 years ago|reply
It keeps freezing, requiring a power-off restart, with more than about twenty-five tabs. Sad to say, both FF and IE8 are much more stable with lots of tabs.
[+] [-] fjabre|16 years ago|reply
I do think FF still has an edge in the stability department however.
[+] [-] endtime|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] DarkShikari|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] byoung2|16 years ago|reply
Is Ctrl C, Ctrl T, Ctrl V, Enter really quicker than right-click->"Search the web for [selected word]"?
[+] [-] sri|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] holygoat|16 years ago|reply
No modifiers, no nonsense.
I love Vimperator.
[+] [-] fjabre|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] dtf|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] windsurfer|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] paul9290|16 years ago|reply
Though it is not my default browser - yet. I'd definitely switch when they have same add-ons and it with such added it remains stable/does not crash. One can hope...
[+] [-] jokull|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] baran|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jsean|16 years ago|reply
"1. Ludicrous Speed for fast fingers." Same can be done in firefox using ctrl-c, ctrl-k, ctrl-v, alt-enter
"2. Each Tab is its own Process" That might actually be a good thing to implement in firefox. Although what he mentions has never happened to me. In my experience firefox rarely crashes.
"3. No bothersome updates on every other launch" What he said. It can be turned off. Altough I haven't cause i find it to be a good thing. Yet another thing which runs itself. Though "sometimes you just want to check gmail and check it fast" (notice how the author says "check gmail" and not "check your email" or some other just-want-to-do-it-fast task) and if firefox starts talking about updates I just click skip/cancel and go on with it. Still fairly fast. Most certainly this is not a point that rates high in my change-browser?-checklist.
"4. The stay-out-of-your-way look" My firefox is themed to be uber minimalistic. URL-bar, searchbar and a bookmarkbar consisting only of icons.
"5. Downloading…" I just like the way all downloads are accessible through one dedicated window/area.
[+] [-] nkohari|16 years ago|reply
[+] [-] unknown|16 years ago|reply
[deleted]