Google enables advertisers a look into your browsing history…

  • Bappity
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    1371 year ago

    every day I’m glad I switched to firefox

    • @[email protected]
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      1 year ago

      I may be cursed but I have never experienced any slowdown with Firefox. I never noticed the appeal of Chrome, but have I only used it twice in my life…

      • @ohlaph
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        121 year ago

        Firefox felt pretty bloated for me back in 2005-2010 or so, they have greatly improved it though and I haven’t noticed a difference in performance on either Chrome or Firefox.

      • tim-clark
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        41 year ago

        I use a macbook for work. Chrome is ridiculously buggy and sucking every bit of memory. Firefox is almost as bad. Chrome is really bad when using more than 1 tab. Firefox has rendering issues with jira and git. Chrome compelling locks up when using meet, Firefox is slightly better.

        In my opinion all browsers have sucked since 2015. Slow, unresponsive, rendering issues, resource hogs. Overall the browser experience has led me to use the internet less and less. It is not the privacy, it is the basic functionality is not working consistently.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          Damn, how old is that MacBook? I think you should ask for a hardware upgrade, because both Chromium based browsers and Firefox don’t use too much resources and run smoothly on the newer models. I can’t say that Chrome isn’t buggy, as I barely use it, but I have never encountered a Firefox bug on any of my devices.

            • @[email protected]
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              1 year ago

              macOS is a desktop OS. It has a terminal, it lets you download that sketchy .app file from a random website, and it allows browsers to use their own engines. So, not too different from Windows or Linux.

              You are correct for iOS and iPadOS though. They must use the WebKit rendering engine. All browsers on those are just Safari reskins.

            • @NOT_RICK
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              11 year ago

              On iOS and iPadOS they do but not on MacOS to my knowledge

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        It works really well on mobile, that’s just about all the appeal I can find. Some sites are a bit glitchy on Firefox, but it’s really rare. I keep it around for those occasions. On PC it’s just Firefox and Edge (cuz work).

      • Jeena
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        141 year ago

        At work I honestly don’t care because I’m to 99% only using company internal websites which don’t have any ads on them anyway.

        • GigglyBobble
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          111 year ago

          internal websites which don’t have any ads on them

          I’m sure Chrome could serve you some anyway.

      • @time_lord
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        -31 year ago

        So use Edge. I don’t think Microsoft is doing this bullshit.

        • @vermyndax
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          61 year ago

          They’re doing their own version of this, not Google’s. It’s equally bad.

    • @[email protected]
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      51 year ago

      Every day a new article comes out that slowly convinces me to switch. Chrome’s profile switcher was light years ahead of Firefox last I checked, but I’m going to have to check again and see if that’s still the case and if so, what I can do to cope.

        • @[email protected]
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          1 year ago

          I’ll have to check, a cursory look at the documentation definitely makes them seem viable. Those definitely weren’t a thing last I checked lol. As for the use case, I have a profile for job 1, 2, personal, and personal 2 (2 being a separate Google account for it’s collaborative stuff).

          For the most part it should do the trick. I dislike the branding for Mozilla VPN, but I see in the screenshots I can set custom proxy settings which will be nice.

          As one of my profiles has a unique set of bookmarks and unique extensions, I’d probably be able to use the containers to substitute what I’m using 3 profiles for right now, and keep a separate profile for the job with unique extensions.

          Thanks! Will definitely start migrating stuff over and seeing how it is. If I can still self host the sync backend I’ll do that as well.

        • @CharlesDarwin
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          01 year ago

          I don’t know of any other browser that has the temporary container notion that FF has.