10 Reasons You Should Switch From Chrome to Firefox. (www.howtogeek.com)
from L4s@lemmy.world to technology@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 06:00
https://lemmy.world/post/12458754

10 Reasons You Should Switch From Chrome to Firefox.::The best browser sync out there.

#technology

threaded - newest

FiskFisk33@startrek.website on 27 Feb 2024 06:10 next collapse

11: It’s the only browser on the market that is not either apple webkit or google chrome based. And it’s in our best interest to keep said market healthy, with as many competing actors as possible.

M500@lemmy.ml on 27 Feb 2024 08:18 next collapse

I just had to install chrome to book plane tickets. Kept getting an error on Firefox.

GregorTacTac@lemm.ee on 27 Feb 2024 08:19 next collapse

Try changing your user agent. What’s the error?

M500@lemmy.ml on 27 Feb 2024 08:26 collapse

When I was choosing a return site it kept saying, “oops there was a mistake. It was not your fault. Try again later”.

Their mobile app sucked too, so I installed chrome to see if it would work and it did right away.

GregorTacTac@lemm.ee on 27 Feb 2024 09:01 collapse

If websites don’t work on Firefox even if the user agent was changed to Chrome I recommend you to use a privacy preserving browser like ungoogled chromium.

Capitao_Duarte@lemmy.eco.br on 27 Feb 2024 10:51 next collapse

How would I change the user agent? Never heard of this before, what is it?

TheRedSpade@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 11:16 next collapse

It’s a string that your browser sends to websites with information about the browser itself and your OS. Sometimes that info will be used to block functionality.

Years ago I tried to use TurboTax from Firefox on Ubuntu. It wouldn’t work because only Internet Explorer on Windows was supported. I changed the user agent to make it appear as though I was using a supported setup, and it worked flawlessly.

I haven’t actually needed to use one in a long time, but an extension search for “user agent switcher” should turn up something that can do it.

ililiililiililiilili@lemm.ee on 27 Feb 2024 11:24 collapse

Easiest would be to install a plugin such as “User-Agent Switcher.” This is the string of text that identifies what browser, version, and platform you’re running to the server you’re accessing.

GregorTacTac@lemm.ee on 27 Feb 2024 13:36 collapse

This is the way I do it when necessary.

M500@lemmy.ml on 27 Feb 2024 11:58 next collapse

Thanks! I just downloaded chrome to use for this one off instance. I’m pretty degoogled, but needed to book a flight so I just needed to get it done.

tsonfeir@lemm.ee on 27 Feb 2024 13:57 collapse

Or find another service.

GregorTacTac@lemm.ee on 27 Feb 2024 14:02 collapse

Bit hard to do that with government websites and stuff like that.

tsonfeir@lemm.ee on 27 Feb 2024 14:07 collapse

Time to emigrate! /s

FiskFisk33@startrek.website on 27 Feb 2024 08:31 next collapse

All the more reason to get more people to use it.

bdonvr@thelemmy.club on 27 Feb 2024 09:46 next collapse

The one time I have to use Chrome is T-Mobile’s site for some reason

flying_gel@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 12:12 next collapse

Thai Airways by any chance? I kept getting weird errors in ff but was ok I’m chrome.

dustyData@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 13:31 collapse

There’s a new feature inside Firefox that allows you to report webpages that are broken on Firefox but work in other browsers. Please use it. It’s a great way to push for universal compatibility within browsers. It’s usually the webpage developer’s fault for using a non-orthodox technique that works exclusively on Chrome, but shouldn’t be done for any sort of reasons, like compliance with web standards. But, it’s possible for Firefox to derive intelligence from the reports and write workarounds.

rottingleaf@lemmy.zip on 27 Feb 2024 09:14 next collapse

At some point there were more than 1 relevant browsers using Gecko, though. Somebody at Mozilla decided to gloriously triumph over allies by killing XULRunner and not offering a replacement.

Not sure if WebKit is such a bad choice in that context.

fruitycoder@sh.itjust.works on 27 Feb 2024 14:06 next collapse

The Tor browser is still Firefox based. Not a large niche, but being THE preferred way to browse with Tor makes it on its own imho

narc0tic_bird@lemm.ee on 27 Feb 2024 15:27 collapse

Tor browser is just Firefox with a different default configuration and add-ons though.

fruitycoder@sh.itjust.works on 27 Feb 2024 16:01 next collapse

As it should be. But honestly unless there needs to be a change there is no reason to fork.

Most of the chromium forks are just branding and proprietary features they want built in, with brave being the only one that feels a little more aggressive in changes from the base.

goldsoul@lemmy.world on 28 Feb 2024 12:30 collapse

Tbf someone else mentioned arc browser which is chromium and seems to be pretty…different from base

fruitycoder@sh.itjust.works on 28 Feb 2024 14:46 collapse

Thanks for the info! Agreed that one seems to be trying to actually value add on top of its base.

Delusion6903@discuss.online on 29 Feb 2024 01:48 collapse

Much like librewolf, my favorite desktop browser

cmhe@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 16:07 collapse

Well, there are also the mobile variants of Firefox, which are more of their own thing.

IMO Mozilla limited itself a bit too much on Firefox. Which results it their web engine not attracting many developers for it outside Mozilla.

Embedding gecko in your own app was much easier in the past. This is now mostly taken over by CEF and WPE for Blink and WebKit respectively.

Also stuff like B2G (Boot 2 Gecko) or FirefoxOS are dead as well.

A goal of open source should be to be hacker friendly as well, were currently Blink/WebKit is leading. There are so many more projects around those engines than Gecko, which is sad.

rottingleaf@lemmy.zip on 27 Feb 2024 17:44 collapse

Yes, I’m talking about that. I was using conkeror (Gecko-based browser with emacs-like controls, which is funny since for editing I’ve never learned emacs and use vi/vim) until it stopped being practical.

Blackmist@feddit.uk on 27 Feb 2024 14:13 next collapse

It really is telling that even Microsoft don’t find it viable to maintain a browser engine.

The “standards” are an absolute fucking nonsense, and boil down to “just do what Chrome does because nobody can stop them”.

douglasg14b@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 15:15 next collapse

I feel like I’m going crazy since we kept preaching for years that this is the end goal and that this is what will happen with Google’s anti-competitive practices. Just get shit on in the comment threads until recently.

It’s not even a feel good I told you so because this just sucks.

MimicJar@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 15:21 next collapse

To be fair to Chrome.

Microsoft had the vast majority with Trident. Mozilla/Firefox slowly gained market share with Gecko. Chrome/Webkit* then took market share from both.

It’s not like Chrome just appeared one day and demanded everyone use them, they gained market share by being a good browser.

*(Chrome now uses a fork of Webkit called Blink.)

That being said I do think Firefox provides the best browser experience, and Chrome users should look into switching.

Which is a long way of saying Microsoft fucked up bad. Real bad.

TheGreenGolem@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 27 Feb 2024 21:42 next collapse

Yeah, like Nokia-bad. Wait…

ilinamorato@lemmy.world on 28 Feb 2024 11:56 collapse

Microsoft is the king of blowing a massive, industry-defining market lead in the fourth quarter due to unforced errors. Especially in the 21st century:

  • They were the default office suite, to the point where their trademark became the category name, and they even had SharePoint; but their stubborn refusal to get into the cloud document game handed off the top spot to Google Docs.

  • They were the king of K12 education by default, since Apple was so expensive and essentially the only factor that matters in K12 is price. Then they completely ignored Google offering really good deals on Chromebooks for a decade or more, and now Chrome OS is the dominant K12 platform.

  • They owned Skype, which was genericized as the popular verb meaning “to make a video call.” But they ignored the opportunity that was the pandemic, and Zoom not only ate their lunch but took the genericized trademark crown.

  • They had Lync, which was the de facto messaging app that every Enterprise deployment used. But then they didn’t update the app for a decade except to change the name to Skype for Business and then to Teams, while Slack ate their lunch.

  • And, as you mentioned, they had the top browser for both users and developers, but did nothing with it until Chrome got unattainably faster, easier to use, and more standards-compliant.

  • Xbox was never the singular market leader like these other things—they’ve always played ping-pong with PlayStation—but Microsoft owns Rare, an industry defining studio, and they’ve completely wasted them for years.

  • They never had dominance in the smartphone world, but they were poised for it with a well-liked and visually distinct platform in Windows Phone which they just abandoned.

  • To a certain extent, they had a sort of “goodwill dominance” in their operating system, which they frittered away on automatic updates and design overhauls and (more recently) AI that nobody was asking for.

They lost all these massive leads while they were chasing dominance in search, or video game livestreaming, or AI, or whatever. They always seem to be focusing on the thing that doesn’t matter while their dominance just flutters away in the wind.

limelight79@lemm.ee on 28 Feb 2024 15:07 collapse

It’s in their DNA. They completely missed the internet boat when it first took off in the early 2000s and played catch-up for years thereafter. You would think they would have learned and not made the same mistakes again that you have in your list, but nope. Maybe they were too busy fighting Linux.

laughterlaughter@lemmy.world on 28 Feb 2024 12:14 collapse

Sigh. Every fucking thread.

This is not true. Firefox is not the only browser that’s not based on Webkit.

There’s Iceweasel, Waterfox, Pale Moon, Seamonkey and Librewolf. That they have a negligible portion of the market is one thing. But they’re on the market, dammit!

theneverfox@pawb.social on 28 Feb 2024 11:22 collapse

I’ve heard this over and over…

But people still aren’t getting it (despite increasingly obvious signs this is already causing problems that will soon get much worse), so I guess we need to keep saying it

FiskFisk33@startrek.website on 28 Feb 2024 17:28 collapse

on the bright side, with the more obvious signs, more people might listen

theneverfox@pawb.social on 28 Feb 2024 23:48 collapse

I definitely get less sneers these days when I talk about things like this

Hell, you know what - I’m going to double down on your bright side - if the enshitification wasn’t so public and rapid, it might’ve been too late before normal people started noticing

Syl@jlai.lu on 27 Feb 2024 06:19 next collapse

And the fact that google is imposing manifest v3, which will tone down ublock origin.

Deebster@programming.dev on 27 Feb 2024 07:16 collapse

The article mentions that “Chrome [has a] more restrictive Manifest 3 plugin API”, but doesn’t go into any examples, when this one is the main one (and why Google brought in manifest v3 at all).

Syl@jlai.lu on 27 Feb 2024 09:16 next collapse
Ephera@lemmy.ml on 28 Feb 2024 02:11 collapse

It should also be mentioned that even compared to Manifest v2, Firefox’s extension API is already more powerful and makes uBlock Origin more effective: github.com/…/uBlock-Origin-works-best-on-Firefox

ensignrolaren@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 06:30 next collapse

There’s like… no downside: all upside.

Edit: I exaggerated, of course. Below this are some downsides that individuals have experienced. But personally, my experience using Firefox on desktop for Mac has been all upside. If everybody who can just tries it out, you might be surprised at how friction-free the change is.

SapphironZA@lemmings.world on 27 Feb 2024 07:36 next collapse

Not strictly true. Firefox gets inferior support from cloud services, like Microsoft. Newer versions of their Web apps are not available on Firefox.

But there should be no downside. It’s all artificial.

AnUnusualRelic@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 09:42 collapse

The big services purposely degrade their sites when users connect with Firefox. It’s well documented.

Unfortunately nothing is being done about it so far.

sonovebitch@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 08:03 next collapse

One thing I miss in Firefox is tab grouping. Yes there are 3rd party extensions that do that. But Chromium based browsers support that natively.

candyman337@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 09:08 collapse

Sideberry is leaps and bounds better at it imo tho

AVengefulAxolotl@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 10:54 next collapse

Yeah, this extension is crazy good. It works as if it was native.

candyman337@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 11:19 collapse

Agreed, and it seems like Firefox has recently made an effort to accommodate the extension more, as it seems to run even better than it used to and is now a recommended extension

Caligvla@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 27 Feb 2024 13:29 next collapse

You haven’t tried Vivaldi then. It has the best tab management features of any browser by leaps and bounds, it saddens me they chose Chromium over Gecko given that manifest v3 is coming.

[deleted] on 27 Feb 2024 13:32 next collapse

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barter@lemmy.eco.br on 27 Feb 2024 13:49 collapse

I don’t like that Vivaldi can’t have multiple levels of grouping like you can in sideberry or tree style tabs

Caligvla@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 27 Feb 2024 15:53 collapse

I guess that’s the one feature Sideberry has over Vivaldi, but I’ve never missed it if I’m being honest. To each their own.

dustyData@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 13:34 next collapse

It gives me anxiety, it’s way too overcrowded and cluttered. I use Tree Style Tab. It does one thing, it does it well, it doesn’t overcomplicate it, it works with me.

candyman337@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 13:40 collapse

I will say it took me some time to get used to it, but it also is a lot easier to use than it used to, they made a lot of things better in the last update

I think it’s one of those things that you have to sit down and test out and really figure out. Tree style tabs are also good though. I definitely think it’s where sideberry got their inspiration

theneverfox@pawb.social on 28 Feb 2024 12:00 collapse

Oh hell yeah… Thank you friend. I immediately downloaded it, and it took me all of 30 seconds to realize this is it

This is what I’ve been looking for, for years now. I even took a crack at it myself several years ago, but then I realized it wasn’t possible without doing an extension (rather than a plug-in) if I wanted to do it right

You have mitigated one of most inconvenient recurring problems in my life. I’m working on a lemmy app right now, and I’m so grateful I’m going to move up the “mark user as friend” feature.

How would you like me to guild your username so I might recognize you in the future? Lit up border? Tiny crown on your avatar? A little lemmy gold symbol next to the score? I’m open to suggestion

aluminium@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 12:07 next collapse

No, in my experience especially the Android version of Firefox is less smooth when playing animations or scrolling on older or lower end devices.

I really hope with the new Focus on Firefox mobile, that they will iron that out.

viking@infosec.pub on 27 Feb 2024 12:27 collapse

Use Fennec instead, no issues on Android

Blackmist@feddit.uk on 27 Feb 2024 14:19 collapse

I have to use Chrome for…

  1. Logging into PSN, since something in Firefox hard locks when I try it. I think it’s to do with Firefox’s password manager.

  2. VR porn.

  3. Some videos. Firefox doesn’t support certain video types (namely HEVC/H.265) due to patent issues.

Haha@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 15:59 collapse

Why wont VR porn work anywhere else?

Blackmist@feddit.uk on 27 Feb 2024 16:18 collapse

Firefox doesn’t appear to support it. Chrome does.

At least on this site.

I think it’s to do with WebXR support, but I’m not digging through 10 layers of bullshit JS to find out for certain.

Haha@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 16:42 next collapse

Fair enough :)

SuspiciousUser@lemmy.ml on 28 Feb 2024 01:20 collapse

Hm, I tried the site and the lady was getting rammed for me in Firefox 123 in Windows.

mox@lemmy.sdf.org on 27 Feb 2024 06:34 next collapse

For Android users, there’s also the Firefox-based Mull.

viking@infosec.pub on 27 Feb 2024 12:28 collapse

I prefer Fennec, Mull is too restrictive. I get the appeal, but I want some of the comforts.

mox@lemmy.sdf.org on 27 Feb 2024 17:56 collapse

Such as?

viking@infosec.pub on 28 Feb 2024 00:03 collapse

My biggest pet peeve is the system color scheme detection. Mull always runs websites in white.

mox@lemmy.sdf.org on 28 Feb 2024 01:20 collapse

Ah. That’s part of Resist Fingerprinting mode, which (after checking about:config) I see Mull enables by default. Desktop Firefox does the same thing in that mode. You could always turn it off if you don’t value that protection.

1984@lemmy.today on 27 Feb 2024 06:44 next collapse

Just need one reason: Google.

aStonedSanta@lemm.ee on 27 Feb 2024 07:23 next collapse

Imn loving floorp so far.

NateNate60@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 07:49 next collapse

Posting this on Lemmy is preaching to the choir.

PrettyFlyForAFatGuy@lemmy.ml on 27 Feb 2024 10:13 next collapse

have any instance admins ever shared the browser stats?

kawa@reddeet.com on 27 Feb 2024 15:44 collapse

Well, me :) right here : analytics.kawa.zip/reddeet.com

PrettyFlyForAFatGuy@lemmy.ml on 27 Feb 2024 16:16 collapse

14% ain’t bad i suppose. and some FF users may be masking, and your sample size of 12 may not be very representative

rambaroo@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 18:00 next collapse

If it is 12%, that’s still much higher than the internet as a whole which is only 2-3%

PrettyFlyForAFatGuy@lemmy.ml on 27 Feb 2024 18:30 collapse

need a bigger sample size really. 14% of reddeet.coms 12 active users is 1 person

kawa@reddeet.com on 27 Feb 2024 21:03 collapse

Yeah it’s a very small instance, I’m the only one really using it right now ^^’

Aermis@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 16:36 collapse

Hi. I’m on lemmy. I haven’t switched. Why? Because there an insane amount of incorporation into Google. Email, my phone communicating to pc, passwords, auto fill, saved cookies, credit cards.

I want to switch. I want to get off chrome from what I’ve been reading regarding it’s practices. But I’m so engraved and the undertaking of switching is not something I’ve committed to yet. Or might never. I already have a Google Home in my kitchen. I feel like privacy isn’t something I have a privilege of anymore.

They’ve got me.

Eezyville@sh.itjust.works on 27 Feb 2024 16:44 next collapse

You store your passwords on Chome?

Aermis@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 17:02 collapse

Yes 😢

Eezyville@sh.itjust.works on 27 Feb 2024 18:10 collapse

Oh man! Download KeePassXC, put your passwords on there, install the browser extension to use it in your browsers. You can back it up any way you want, including using Google Drive because the file is encrypted.

[deleted] on 27 Feb 2024 18:28 collapse

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Eezyville@sh.itjust.works on 27 Feb 2024 19:32 collapse

Some people don’t want to sign up to a cloud provider or manage their own instance. KeePassXC offers a simple file that can be stored on your devices. It’s easy to sync using your existing cloud accounts and encrypted.

PersonalDevKit@aussie.zone on 29 Feb 2024 04:48 collapse

The overlap of the community that don’t want to sign up to cloud providers and those that save their passwords to chrome is a very small overlap.

Poco a poco, little by little. Jumping into the deepend is not for everyone

fahfahfahfah@lemmy.billiam.net on 27 Feb 2024 17:00 collapse

support.mozilla.org/…/switching-chrome-firefox

Firefox makes it easy to import all that stuff

Aermis@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 17:02 collapse

Huh. Wow. And it has mobile to pc incorporation?

fahfahfahfah@lemmy.billiam.net on 27 Feb 2024 17:14 next collapse

If you mean it syncs to mobile, yes

Hadriscus@lemm.ee on 27 Feb 2024 18:38 next collapse

My Firefox experience is seamless between my work station, laptop and Android phone. Syncing happens immediately when I open my session on either of them. I don’t use the Google ecosystem much though (I mean Google pay, etc) so transitioning may be harder than I imagine from where I sit

Aermis@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 19:03 collapse

Man I don’t really use anything Google except my Gmail when logging into misc accounts

Silentiea@lemm.ee on 27 Feb 2024 20:18 collapse

Honestly for me it has much better synching. It took a little work to move everything over, but far less than I anticipated.

bryan@lemmy.sdf.org on 27 Feb 2024 07:58 next collapse

Meh. Been using Safari since 2012 and it’s fine.

rikudou@lemmings.world on 27 Feb 2024 08:01 next collapse

Ah, the new Internet Explorer.

abhibeckert@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 08:07 collapse

That’s silly. Safari is neither the worst browser nor the most popular one. IE was both of those things.

NoisyFlake@lemm.ee on 27 Feb 2024 08:09 next collapse

They probably meant from a developer perspective. It’s the only browser that’s missing a lot of CSS/JS features and needs weird workarounds for the simplest things.

redcalcium@lemmy.institute on 27 Feb 2024 09:27 collapse

Apple has been suspected to intentionally slow down safari development in some key areas so it won’t cannibalize the AppStore. Frustrated web devs, unable to get their web apps to work correctly on safari mobile, would publish their apps in the AppStore instead of using PWA.

dustyData@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 13:39 next collapse

That has been mostly solved by Apple in the most Apple way possible. They just forbade PWA on iOS. Period. Like, they still load on Safari, but you can’t pin it as a pwa to your app drawer anymore.

smileyhead@discuss.tchncs.de on 27 Feb 2024 13:44 collapse

Slowing down web development good, but not like that.

Wootz@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 08:19 collapse

Did you read the article at all?

bryan@lemmy.sdf.org on 27 Feb 2024 08:23 collapse

Yes. Firefox is my backup for the 1-2 websites I encounter per year that don’t work with Safari.

[deleted] on 27 Feb 2024 09:16 next collapse

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AnUnusualRelic@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 09:38 collapse

I never got this whole “speed” argument.

I never had a lot of difference between both browsers (never got to use chrome much, admittedly), but even when it was supposedly “bad”, Firefox never struck me as being especially slow.

Was it a windows thing or what?

[deleted] on 27 Feb 2024 15:00 next collapse

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sunbeam60@lemmy.one on 27 Feb 2024 19:41 next collapse

I think it was from a time when you could notice the difference. Now it’s just a race towards marginal gains.

theneverfox@pawb.social on 28 Feb 2024 12:06 collapse

I definitely noticed, before quantum (like 5 years ago) single page apps and frameworks like react were becoming a thing, and it was noticeably less snappy than chrome

After they announced the rewrite to better handle shadow doms and partial repaints, I switched for everything but development

Since then, they’ve done another rewrite, and the dev tools are closer, so I only open chrome when a site I have to use isn’t working, or by client request

psycho_driver@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 15:01 next collapse

Anybody else having flaky behavior with youtube videos in Firefox lately? Like, only audio resuming but video freezing after rewinding? I’m wondering if this is intentional on the part of Google.

douglasg14b@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 15:13 next collapse

Given Google and YouTube’s history of intentionally and maliciously disrupting other browsers that aren’t chrome, it’ll be a safe bet that it’s intentional.

Saprophyte@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 20:48 collapse

zdnet.com/…/youtube-is-slowing-video-loads-on-fir…

udon@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 22:41 collapse

So, the solution is to disable the adblocker? Not gonna happen

Saprophyte@lemmy.world on 29 Feb 2024 11:49 collapse

I use pihole. It’s external to a browser extension and performs the same without the in browser complaints about using an ad blocker.

wurosh@lemmy.ml on 27 Feb 2024 17:41 next collapse

Yes, but I’ve had it across multiple sites that play video, so I don’t think it’s youtube.

Brokkr@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 19:33 next collapse

I think youtube makes itself terrible if you don’t have premium. I have the problems you describe and others on both my desktop with FF or my chromebook with chrome.

tgxn@lemmy.tgxn.net on 27 Feb 2024 23:20 collapse

Nope, it’s still just as terrible with premium.

stoly@lemmy.world on 28 Feb 2024 00:43 next collapse

I’ve heard this but it hasn’t happened to me.

Harpsist@lemmy.world on 28 Feb 2024 03:11 next collapse

On my pc with a couple ad blockers youtube is SLOW.

If i turn them off it runs fine.

On my android using adaway I have zero youtube lag.

So yeah. Seems pretty intentional

Delusion6903@discuss.online on 29 Feb 2024 04:48 collapse

On mobile I only use New Pipe for videos. Admittedly, I don’t do much YouTube but I haven’t noticed any problems on my laptop.

SoupBrick@yiffit.net on 27 Feb 2024 16:29 next collapse

Screen capture being disabled in private mode on firefox is really reassuring to me.

michel@friend.ketterle.ch on 27 Feb 2024 17:07 next collapse

@L4s
Fully agree, but @howtogeek.com please enhance your privacy with reducing your dependency to third party scripts.

MSids@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 17:58 next collapse

I wish the password autofill feature was more robust for Firefox on Android. Using it as my default password provider but it regularly does not pick up on password fields.

Hadriscus@lemm.ee on 27 Feb 2024 18:35 next collapse

I’ve had this happen with obscure government sites that look like they were made in the 90s, I manually add the login & password for these

bcgm3@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 18:41 collapse

Dunno if this helps you at all, but I’ve been using BitWarden to manage my passwords since I made the switch from Chrome to Firefox (both on PC and my Android phone). It doesn’t fill passwords automatically in either case, but it’s not much extra work to invoke BitWarden to fill those fields as-needed on either device, and it works very consistently. It’s also (I’m told) much more secure. Just thought I’d share that here!

Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 27 Feb 2024 19:45 collapse

BitWarden is adding autofill!

Appoxo@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 27 Feb 2024 20:23 next collapse

Personally I prefer ctrl + l

niisyth@lemmy.ca on 27 Feb 2024 22:58 collapse

So, I’ve been using Bitwarden as an autofill service in Android and that works just as well I feel. Atleast for login details.

lovesickoyster@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 18:28 next collapse

The only reason I have chrome even installed is because I am forced to use it for chromecast every once in a while.

Psythik@lemmy.world on 27 Feb 2024 18:36 next collapse

I use Ungoogled Chromium exclusively for YouTube, cause my graphics card csn upscale videos and convert them to HDR, but not in Firefox. The moment I get those features in Firefox, I’m done with Chrome for good.

[deleted] on 27 Feb 2024 18:48 next collapse

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[deleted] on 27 Feb 2024 19:37 next collapse

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[deleted] on 27 Feb 2024 19:40 collapse

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Silentiea@lemm.ee on 27 Feb 2024 20:16 collapse

There’s a video service my therapist uses that refuses to run in Firefox. I expect it probably could, but it’s a lot less work to just launch chrome for that one use case.

stoly@lemmy.world on 28 Feb 2024 00:42 collapse

Install a user agent switcher. There are several for Firefox and you can spoof chrome.

Silentiea@lemm.ee on 29 Feb 2024 03:34 collapse

Welllll I also have the other use case of my partner refuses to switch, so she wants chrome on the computer too.

stoly@lemmy.world on 29 Feb 2024 03:36 collapse

Use different user accounts. Do you own thing. You can have both installed.

Silentiea@lemm.ee on 29 Feb 2024 04:38 collapse

I do have both installed, but it’s easier to use chrome for the one use case I have since it’s going to be installed anyway for her

Edit: oh you mean a user agent switcher too… Well, that seems like work 😛

stoly@lemmy.world on 29 Feb 2024 16:10 collapse

I’m saying that you log in as “jojo” to the computer and another account is called “jojo’s gf”. You can do whatever you want in each and won’t bother the other. Computers are designed for muiltiuser use.

Silentiea@lemm.ee on 29 Feb 2024 16:15 collapse

It doesn’t bother either of us to be using the same login on the computer. And it doesn’t really bother her that firefix is installed nor me that chrome is.

And since chrome is sitting right there, it’s the easiest way to use my therapist’s video service.

sherlockholmez@lemmy.ml on 28 Feb 2024 02:28 next collapse

TAB GROUPS, FIREFOX, BRING BACK TAB GROUPS.

And no, extensions aren’t helping, their UX is so much worse.

That’s just a make or break feature for me.

harsh3466@lemmy.ml on 28 Feb 2024 02:31 next collapse

I would love tab groups

jh34@lemmy.world on 28 Feb 2024 08:38 next collapse

So I tried to find what tab groups are but most of the results are feature request threads so apologies if this isn’t what you want.

Waterfox will soon be adding some sort of tab grouping feature akin to what tree-style-tab extension does. Here’s the blogpost about it www.waterfox.net/blog/waterfox-x-treestyletab/

Again I’m not sure if that type of grouping is what you’re looking for but if it is consider watching out for the feature release. Longtime waterfox user and haven’t had many complaints, Alex has quickly responded to the two issues I made in the github including a feature request that got added within a week (ability to unload tabs with right click).

ilinamorato@lemmy.world on 28 Feb 2024 11:09 collapse

Not OP, but this is one of my long-time desires too. I’m pretty sure they mean Tab Groups implemented in the way Chrome does natively. Currently no extension on Firefox can do it on the tab bar because no extension can modify the tab bar.

limelight79@lemm.ee on 28 Feb 2024 14:58 next collapse

When I right click on a tab in Firefox, I can reopen it in a container. The containers (at first glance) seem to be limited to Personal, Work, Banking, Shopping, and Facebook (which is probably there because I have Facebook container installed). In settings I can modify the container tabs available. (And turn the feature on or off, but it’s already on because of Facebook container.)

Is that what that is? It looks a lot like the example you linked. Firefox 123.0, but it’s been there for quite a while.

ilinamorato@lemmy.world on 28 Feb 2024 16:46 collapse

Not really, though the functionalities are adjacent and I could see how one would make that mistake. I do indeed use container tabs, and they’re a killer feature.

Tab groups are merely organizational, allowing you to reference, store, close, and save groups of tabs en masse; by contrast, container tabs don’t do ANY organization at all; you can’t group them all together, move them all to a new window as one, bookmark them all, close them all, etc.

limelight79@lemm.ee on 28 Feb 2024 19:34 collapse

Interesting, thanks. Seems like the containers could be expanded into the tab group functionality without too much trouble.

ilinamorato@lemmy.world on 28 Feb 2024 20:17 collapse

True, and I would love the ability to link them, but I think having them linked by default would be confusing to users who don’t need containerization. “Wait, I already logged in to that!”

sherlockholmez@lemmy.ml on 05 Mar 2024 19:39 collapse

Yes, albeit like Vivaldi/Arc.

[deleted] on 28 Feb 2024 14:55 collapse

.

mellowheat@suppo.fi on 28 Feb 2024 07:34 next collapse

How many of these apply to ungoogled-chromium?

omnomed@lemmy.world on 28 Feb 2024 10:47 collapse

A lot of the privacy aspects mentioned in the article would apply but the extra features(like facebook container) would not. The extension support is also an issue since the extensions themselves have their own privacy policies, so if you get any which are hosted on google owned chrome web store all your privacy cautiousness goes down the drain unless you’re using a vpn.

Firefox addons also have their own privacy policies but you can simply choose the ones with open source licenses so it should be rather simple to be more protected.

sherlockholmez@lemmy.ml on 28 Feb 2024 10:09 next collapse

Look at how Vivaldi and Arc do tab management.

Yankee_Self_Loader@lemmy.world on 28 Feb 2024 11:18 next collapse

You guys switched away from Firefox?

DrQuickbeam@lemmy.world on 28 Feb 2024 13:41 next collapse

Switched away to Vivaldi and Opera on desktop years ago due to better design and ability to swap between workspaces. Trying to migrate back to Firefox for ethical reasons. Desktop design still lags behind but privacy is great.

CH3DD4R_G0BL1N@sh.itjust.works on 29 Feb 2024 02:22 next collapse

Been with the fox since before the quantum update. I never realized it was as obscure as it apparently is.

amorpheus@lemmy.world on 29 Feb 2024 04:04 collapse

It wasn’t, popularity waned slowly over the years.

odelik@lemmy.today on 29 Feb 2024 03:57 collapse

Years ago Firefox had a massive memory leak that would wind up crashing FX randomly or just crushing your system resources. The bug persisted for years. and I swirched to Chrome to get away from that poor experience. A few years back, a random community contributer, that was also fed up, dug in and fixed several issues responsible for the leaks. I remeber thinking that I should give FX a go again, but didn’t until relatively recently.

daddyjones@lemmy.world on 28 Feb 2024 11:41 next collapse

Does anyone have any experience with Firefox on Android?

RunAroundDesertYou@lemmy.world on 28 Feb 2024 11:53 next collapse

For me it is great on a smartphone but pretty underwhelming on my android tablet. It doesn’t scale websites properly on the larger screen and doesn’t support a tab list on top anymore (like Firefox on desktops).

antihumanitarian@lemmy.world on 28 Feb 2024 11:55 next collapse

It runs great now. Most importantly, it supports extensions like ublock.

Drummyralf@lemmy.world on 28 Feb 2024 11:59 next collapse

Works mostly great. Addons like uBlock Origin and Super Agent (auto reject all cookies) is great for your mobile experience.

I noticed Youtube site sometimes has weird framerates. But since Google removed premium lite subscription, I refuse to use the Youtube app and just view with uBlock in browser, even with the framerate issues.

laughterlaughter@lemmy.world on 28 Feb 2024 12:08 next collapse

Yes. It used to suck, say, 10 years ago. My baseline was Youtube and Reddit (back then, okay?) Could I watch Youtube videos the same way as with Chrome or Android browser? No? Then, not ready. Did i.reddit.com open fine? No? Not ready.

Then it happened. And I switched and it has been wonderful ever since.

The only thing that I miss is the “pull down page to reload” gesture [EDIT: THANK YOU ALL! I’VE ENABLED IT - GREAT!!!]. Not sure why Firefox hasn’t implemented that yet. Patents? And also, when a video is in an iframe, it won’t respect the “block autoplay” feature. The rest is dandy.

camelbeard@lemmy.world on 28 Feb 2024 12:13 next collapse

I don’t really visit reddit anymore, but still end up there sometimes because of a google search. Anyway there is an extension for Firefox Android to always show old Reddit. So you don’t have to log in or install the app.

laughterlaughter@lemmy.world on 29 Feb 2024 08:15 collapse

Yup. I know all that. But I was talking about back then when Mobile Firefox simply didn’t render reddit correctly. As soon as it did, I switched.

eatfudd@lemm.ee on 28 Feb 2024 14:00 next collapse

Settings > customize. Pull to refresh is there

laughterlaughter@lemmy.world on 29 Feb 2024 07:59 collapse

You change my life. Thanks!

cujo255@sh.itjust.works on 28 Feb 2024 22:34 collapse

You can enable the refresh gesture in the settings in Firefox

laughterlaughter@lemmy.world on 29 Feb 2024 07:59 collapse

Thanks!

Blackmist@feddit.uk on 28 Feb 2024 12:31 next collapse

Yeah, it’s alright.

You can install an ad blocker in it, so it’s automatically better than Chrome.

With that and a few cookie popup removers, it’s almost like the web is usable again.

Toribor@corndog.social on 28 Feb 2024 12:51 next collapse

Firefox on Android is great. I migrated that first before I actually migrated back to Firefox on desktop.

maniac@lemmy.world on 28 Feb 2024 12:51 next collapse

Using use daily. Only problem I sometimes have is the inability to upload images, so I just use duckduckgo’s browser

DrQuickbeam@lemmy.world on 28 Feb 2024 13:19 next collapse

I recently made the switch. Make sure to install whatever add-ons you need, turn on the “open links in apps” setting, and turn on the “pull to refresh” setting. Import your bookmarks and you can still use the Android password manager. It’s not 100% as smooth, but it’s pretty close.

DrQuickbeam@lemmy.world on 28 Feb 2024 13:26 collapse

The main problems I have with it now are sometimes there are still issues with loading between browser and apps. Like it might open multiple tabs trying to open an app, and it leaves the app redirect pages open in your tabs list. Additionally, sometimes (like 3% of the time) website scaling doesn’t always work, especially on older sites or those made with janky CMS’s, and I’ve also rarely had problems with some dynamic content like inline forms and graphs.

rob_t_firefly@lemmy.world on 28 Feb 2024 13:49 next collapse

Firefox on Android is fine, except they insist upon disabling about:config on the main branch of the browser for some damn stupid reason. You have to use a nightly or beta build to be trusted with your own config that much.

Personally, I ended up switching to the Fennec fork over this.

markpaskal@lemmy.ca on 28 Feb 2024 20:23 next collapse

Its ok but I regularly have to swipe the app away and re open it when it displays a blano screen instead of the website.

Thermal_shocked@lemmy.world on 29 Feb 2024 01:37 next collapse

with ublock origin plugin, it’s amazing

Delusion6903@discuss.online on 29 Feb 2024 04:40 next collapse

It is my default. I use ublock and Dark Background Light Text extensions. And the reader view is better than any chromium phone browser.

bitwolf@lemmy.one on 29 Feb 2024 04:52 next collapse

It’s great but they are two, reported, bugs that annoy me.

First, it sometimes gets stuck half way between dark and light mode.

Second, sometimes it gets stuck starting to load a page. The webciew gets stuck but not the chrome. If you switch tabs the same page will appear. If you enter a new page it will never load. A force close fixes it but it’s annoying.

Using beta is imperative since it enables add-ons . However the bugs are also in stable.

Sheldan@mander.xyz on 29 Feb 2024 19:26 collapse

I am, sometimes there is an issue with videos in Fullscreen, where the video plays just somewhere to the top and off screen, besides that it’s fine.

Kedly@lemm.ee on 28 Feb 2024 13:25 next collapse

I feel like anyone on Lemmy who isnt yet using Firefox is the kind of person who isnt going switch now because an article told them they should

edit: it seems I had a stroke (not seriously) while writing this message, and have since edited it so it makes sense

pathief@lemmy.world on 28 Feb 2024 20:43 next collapse

I’ve been moving away from Google in the last year and moving to Firefox was one of my first moves. It’s honestly a downgrade in usability but I guess that applies to all alternative products.

I just wish I could sync my bookmarks between desktop and mobile. Seems like no one has this problem but firefox sync just does not work for me. It just says last update was never. Let me know if you know how to fix it.

ExperimentalGuy@programming.dev on 29 Feb 2024 01:13 next collapse

What was the downgrade in usability you saw? I used to be an avid chrome user turned Firefox, but I would say the opposite.

pathief@lemmy.world on 29 Feb 2024 06:22 collapse

  • Tab Grouping would be my first pick.

  • When I first started using Firefox on Linux, dragging tabs was really reallyyyyyy bad but they have heavily improved it. UI just feels more polished on chrome

  • Sync doesn’t work for me, though it seems to work for everyone else. It doesn’t give me any error or a hint to what the problem might me, which is just bad UX.

  • Chromecasting an entire tab doesn’t work, though I guess can’t we can’t blame Firefox for that, can we?

  • My unit tests take at the very least twice as long to run on Firefox

  • Pinned tabs occasionally just disappear and I have to create everything again. Extensions exist to prevent this but don’t work with multi containers, which is honestly Firefox best feature.

ExperimentalGuy@programming.dev on 29 Feb 2024 17:45 collapse

What stops you from finding extensions that implement similar functionality? I know tree style tabs are pretty popular instead of tab grouping. This also so the first time I’ve heard of sync or pinned tabs not working. I’m kinda curious ab ur setup if youd be cool with sharing that? I feel like it might be a setup problem instead of a software one.

pathief@lemmy.world on 29 Feb 2024 19:24 collapse

Firefox extensions can’t mess with Firefox tabs. Sure you have extensions such as tree style tabs but they don’t really change the tab bar, they add side-panel with your tabs in a tree style format. This means you end up with a tab bar and a tab panel, which is a bit clunky. There are ways to hide the tab bar by messing with the userChrome file but that’s not user friendly at all.

I don’t have any particular setup that is too outrageous or different from anyone else. I just use Firefox, whatever is the most recent version in the arch repository. Ocasionally I open the browser and I don’t have any pinned tabs, I don’t know why. It’s not a frequent event or something tied to anything I can think off, it just appears to be random.

The sync problem has been reported here: bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1879022

ExperimentalGuy@programming.dev on 03 Mar 2024 15:53 collapse

Damn I was wrong my b. Haha at least now I know Firefox doesn’t work everywhere, I appreciate it.

pathief@lemmy.world on 03 Mar 2024 18:38 collapse

It still works and is my daily driver! On both mobile and desktop!

I think it’s extremely important to support Google alternatives and I will continue to do so. Firefox still has pain points and recognizing them is also important.

cuchilloc@lemmy.world on 29 Feb 2024 03:02 next collapse

Just log out and log back in, and make sure you use the same account on both machines .

pathief@lemmy.world on 29 Feb 2024 06:14 collapse

I’ve done that several times.

Delusion6903@discuss.online on 29 Feb 2024 04:57 collapse

Sync works great over here. It even syncs history which is great because I use an extension on the laptop to limit history to 28 days and that becomes synced with Android without an additional extension.

werefreeatlast@lemmy.world on 28 Feb 2024 21:05 next collapse

And one thing that irks is that you can’t have a local file be your homepage and new tab page. I want to have all my work related links in a local immutable HTML page and every new tab or every time I open the browser it goes there for me to choose what of 5 links to pick…time sheet, team site, hr site, all the vendors sites etc…npr, my home servers etc. c’mon man! The only way to make it happen is to serve it on a local server that I am not allowed to install, or a server at home that I don’t actually want to do.

mac@infosec.pub on 28 Feb 2024 21:24 next collapse

Host it on Netlify or something similar, it’s free.

JaY_III@lemmy.ca on 29 Feb 2024 04:04 collapse

Extensions are your friend My new tab has all my sites pinned. Have a look at the add-ons I am 99% sure what you want has already been made

werefreeatlast@lemmy.world on 01 Mar 2024 05:12 collapse

Add-ons have no access to the local system anymore:

mastodon.social/…/112004523925195688

You know, for security reasons.

nao@sh.itjust.works on 28 Feb 2024 22:17 next collapse

using chrome in 2024

5opn0o30@lemmy.world on 29 Feb 2024 00:24 next collapse

I love Firefox. Been enjoying DDG browser on iOS.

latetolemmy@lemmy.world on 29 Feb 2024 01:54 next collapse

Thanks but I’m sticking to Brave

Delusion6903@discuss.online on 29 Feb 2024 05:01 collapse

Forgetting politics, I liked Brave. But sometimes they do seem a little shady. I’m loving Librewolf even more, though there’s no Android version. It does sync with Firefox and Mull though.

phreekno@lemmy.world on 29 Feb 2024 02:35 next collapse

Firefox Multiaccount Containers, the thing that can’t be beat by even the best chrome derivatives

odelik@lemmy.today on 29 Feb 2024 03:45 next collapse

I switched on my personal devices (need to use chrome for gsuite integrations at work).

On desktop, it’s great and I’m loving it. And kicking myself for not switching back sooner after the massive-years-long-memory-leak was finally fixed a few years back

On mobile, it’s mostly great. The privacy focus, ad block support, and plug-in support is a plus. But I realllly want the tab groups that mobile Chrome introduced a while back. That had such a great mobile UX that I’ve found myself still loading up chrome now and then when I find myself wanting that UX. I looked to see if there were plugins that could make that possible, but was disappointed to see none and let down that it seems impossible with the current tab implementation.

thorbot@lemmy.world on 29 Feb 2024 04:21 next collapse

10 reasons:

  1. I always used Firefox
  2. I always used Firefox
  3. I always used Firefox
  4. I always used Firefox
  5. I always used Firefox
  6. I always used Firefox
  7. I always used Firefox
  8. I always used Firefox
  9. I always used Firefox
  10. Google can suck my saggy man tits
olivebranch@lemmy.ca on 29 Feb 2024 05:10 next collapse

I just need one, being able to change if something in the code is against my interests.

AzureRT@reddthat.com on 29 Feb 2024 05:43 next collapse

Firefox is king (saying this as someone who actually likes it, not as a fanboy)

killpunchdeluxe@lemmy.world on 29 Feb 2024 06:03 collapse

Mozilla in general honestly is pretty awesome ngl

They have this nonprofit called Privacy Not Included that rates companies/products based on how much they respect user privacy.

Modern cars collect literally everything they can about you. Low key kinda scary yo

Privacy Not Included

lefaucet@slrpnk.net on 29 Feb 2024 07:36 next collapse

Preach!

I’m convinced that were it not for Mozilla, microsoft would have prevented google from taking over. We’d be in a shittyworld controlled by the asinine cerification heierarchy of microsoft obfuscation.

MS owned a big chunk of Apple before Safari was a thing and they had crazy drm-ish plans with IE before they got thwacked with the monoploy stick by the feds in the late nineties. Netscape was on the ropes and there was essentially no one left.

I think it’s time for Google to be thwacked. Apple too. They’re going really anti-consumer in shady ways leading us to a weird new AI/surveillence capitalism led middle ages… Like no new knowledge, education will be towards the new corporate capitalist religion that gets people to serve their lords and noone has money or knowledge but the king and a few of their buddies. They’ll grant the shineyist most deluded followers with a meaningless knighthoods that only serve to get that person laid so others will strive to sacrifice for the king so they can win the knighthood lottery and get laid and raisea family in a nice house… Anyway…

It’s no good. We gotta skip straight to the next Renaissance where everyone has control over their identity, data and thoughts and can follow their own god in peace and healthy debate. And everone has healthcare and basic needs met and we’re all moving towards Star Trek.

Moving towards Star Trek is what made the 90’s great… Well, more accurate to say it was the great thing out of the nineties; before the new fascisism riding the 9/11 fear wave and the TSA and before ‘enshittification’ was a word.

Anyway… What was I sayinf?

Oh yeah Open source all the way!

TypicalHog@lemm.ee on 02 Mar 2024 16:49 collapse

Why not Brave? I mean… Firefox is fine, just, some of the extensions I need for example are not available on it.

franklin@lemmy.world on 04 Mar 2024 11:48 collapse

Even Brave uses Chromium as a launching point before all of its customizations.

This in turn gives Google control over web standards because if they choose not to support something or if they implement it in a particular way they effectively govern it’s adoption because of their near universal market share.

I’m sure I missed a lot of nuance but this is my best take at explaining it.

TypicalHog@lemm.ee on 04 Mar 2024 14:49 collapse

That is a good point!