• @nebulaone@lemmy.worldOP
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    274 months ago

    I hate the fact that the only viable choice is between Chromium, Chromium, Chromium, Chromium, Chromium or Firefox.

    • stinerman [Ohio]
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      104 months ago

      There is Safari, which uses a different rendering engine, but yeah, there’s basically 3 browsers. Chromium, Safari, and Firefox.

      I don’t use Safari and never have, so I can’t speak to its compatibility or quirks for the user or for developers.

      • Klopstock
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        24 months ago

        Safari is behind on a ton of features from what i know i would not use safari even if i had the option.

        • Max-P
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          4 months ago

          It’s known as the new Internet Explorer in web development circles. And just like IE, it’s exclusive to an operating system so you have to figure out a way to get macOS to even test it out. On iOS it’s the only browser engine even available, and when the EU stuff finally comes through, it’s still an IE situation because defaults and OS integration. You can’t ignore iOS for any serious web jobs.

          I’ve been out of web development for a little while now, but the bugs were very IE-esque.

          At least they finally just implemented WebPush, at long last.

          • @DaPorkchop_@lemmy.ml
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            14 months ago

            Wasn’t Safari available for Windows at some point? I swear I remember it being installed on my school laptop like 10 years ago.

            • @Teils13@lemmy.eco.br
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              14 months ago

              According to the Safari (web browser) wikipedia article: «Between 2007 and 2012, Apple maintained a Windows version, but abandoned it due to low market share», so yes.

      • @carl_dungeon@lemmy.world
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        24 months ago

        Safari still has the best power management and speed in most cases. I mainly use safari but swap back and forth with Vivaldi on a daily basis.

      • @nebulaone@lemmy.worldOP
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        74 months ago

        Currently using LibreWolf on desktop and Mull on android (both Firefox / gecko based) and I am happy with them :)

            • @AndrewZabar@lemmy.world
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              24 months ago

              Eh, I don’t really think any are particularly unusual. Although I have tried some over the years.

              I use Firefox on all my PCs which are all various distros of Linux, as well as Chromium for some things. I have a few sites setup as their own webapps using Electron, so essentially also chromium. I just installed Vivaldi recently to try for some things I need to test, haven’t started using it yet. I also try out different ones now and then.

              Safari on my iOS devices as well as Aloha, OperaGX, occasionally Firefox but their iOS implementation is really sad. Some others now and then, but that’s mainly it at the moment. There were some I stopped using for one reason or another. Long ago I used Brave for a little while until I read about their agreements with some ad companies so that’s out. I really like Phoenix browser except it’s got some issues. Osiris, Puma, Dolphin, ugh so many that come and go if I need something temporarily.

                • @AndrewZabar@lemmy.world
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                  14 months ago

                  If it does what you need and you cannot find any articles anywhere specifically calling attention to a security problem or anything like that, then you rate it “useful” I mean it’s not too complicated.

    • @Teils13@lemmy.eco.br
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      34 months ago

      There is also Gnome Web (ex Epyphany), a browser that also uses the Webkit engine (as far as i know it’s the only ‘clone’ of Safari cause of this). It’s made for Linux (and Unix in general), though i heard somewhere they will make a windows version too. So we can broaden the choice to Chromium, Firefox or Safari.

    • @linearchaos@lemmy.world
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      14 months ago

      It does suck ass that every browser is Chrome. But on the upside almost every website works in almost every browser.