• ares35
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    858 months ago

    me and mozilla go way back, to the days of netscape navigator. we’re old friends… even through the worst of times (aol ownership), i’ve stood by my best bud.

  • @nyakojiru@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    638 months ago

    I remember back then when people stop using FF because it used more PC resources than the OS itself and all started using Chrome because it was fast and lightweight.

    • @HW07@lemmy.world
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      218 months ago

      Mental how it is genuinely the other way around now, but on the masses people might not even know that a computer has limited resources so that’s probably a contributor to no mass exodus to FF.

      • @Chobbes@lemmy.world
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        78 months ago

        The average person definitely doesn’t have a good understanding of computational resources, but they will use an application they find smoother and less clunky than another. Realistically the performance and resource usage of chrome is not going to be bad enough to drive most people to Firefox these days, and Firefox won’t be enough of an improvement for most people to notice. Chrome also had a huge marketing campaign when it launched… I suspect that was crucial for getting people to adopt chrome (otherwise how do you even get people to think about switching?), but I don’t think Mozilla has the resources for such a campaign. Time will tell, though. I hope we’ll see more people switching to Firefox in the future.

        • tpyoman
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          98 months ago

          I paid for the whole CPU, I’ll use the whole CPU. /s

        • @aberrate_junior_beatnik@lemmy.world
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          48 months ago

          Not necessarily. Using more RAM doesn’t increase energy usage, at least not significantly. And if you can use that to avoid making disk or network accesses, it’ll save energy. Obviously keeping the CPU spinning at 100% isn’t helping anybody, though.

  • @Pregnenolone@lemmy.world
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    448 months ago

    Always has been.

    As someone using Firefox for basically ever, Chrome has always seemed like bloated garbage to me. Deleted it a while back and never looked back.

  • @Resonosity@lemmy.ca
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    378 months ago

    I had my first website tell me today that I can’t access their domain on FF. It was Adobe. Fuck em

  • @NightAuthor@lemmy.world
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    308 months ago

    I’m not a fan of the inability to drag a tab into a snapping position, I have to drag it out, then drag the new window to the snap location.

    And apparently this has been a documented issue for 15 years, and there’s been little to no progress in all that time.

    • @pedz@lemmy.ca
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      218 months ago

      The open source community works in mysterious ways. This bug reminds me about the audio via HDMI bug for old radeon video cards. A simple flag in kernel configuration could have fixed it, yet the bug has been present in kernels from something like 4.1 to 6.0. It only recently has been fixed, after years of having to patch your kernel for a very simple bug.

      • @mlg@lemmy.world
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        78 months ago

        The secret is fixing it yourself and submitting a pull request for approval/further additions.

        Unless its GNOME in which case the maintainers will tell you to screw off and you will promptly switch to a better alternative.

        • @NightAuthor@lemmy.world
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          78 months ago

          I’m trying, I don’t know much about JS or the Firefox codebase, but I’ve been reading for hours and I’m getting a grasp of how it currently works.

          Now I’m tryna see how chromium does it to either replicate, or inspire.

    • @HW07@lemmy.world
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      98 months ago

      When it comes to open-source software, usually it’s absolutely critical bugs that get patched or necessary features that get worked on, since it’s really just volunteer work.

      Pay every contributor a salary to make the program “feel” nice instead of actually bloody work (hi every ms app), then we’ll talk.

  • @Raz@lemm.ee
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    8 months ago

    I really want to switch back but… honestly: Chromium Edge, despite a few annoying features being shoved in your face, is actually a really nice browser IMO. It’s definitely going to take some time to get used to FF again.

    I’m so used to things like vertical tabs, icon only bookmarks, etc… I know I can change a lot in FF myself, but having to add custom css and whatnot on every device I use FF on is just annoying.

      • @Raz@lemm.ee
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        18 months ago

        I had custom css in FF and Firefox sync did not sync those manual edits.

    • @aulin@lemmy.world
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      28 months ago

      There are tons of extensions for tab management for Firefox. If vertkcal tabs is just that they’re arranged in lines instead of columns, I’ve used Tree Style Tab and Sidebery, and there are many others.

  • @SeethingSloth@lemmy.world
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    118 months ago

    Switched last night and damn, Firefox has gotten so much better. Used to be the first browser I manually installed around 2004, until Chrome released around 2008 or something. I love that it has extensions on mobile and bookmark/history sync now.

  • Cosmic Cleric
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    78 months ago

    Just so that I can keep track of the score, I actually moved from Firefox to DuckDuckGo, because Firefox was considered not respecting privacy. This was not so many years ago.

    Are we now saying today that the tables are turned? Or just that both are bad, but one is less bad?

      • moon_matter
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        108 months ago

        The reality is that to the average user all browsers are the same. A lot of technologies have sort of peaked for regular people and browsers are one of those. There was a time when you needed plugins to do basic things like view PDFs or videos, to play games (flash, java) and there would be a new major change to HTML or CSS every few months etc.

        That’s no longer a problem. All browsers are near equal in their ability to render pages. So people are naturally going to go with what feels familiar. We lost the battle for market share the minute Google decided to advertise Chrome on their search page.

      • Cosmic Cleric
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        28 months ago

        Everything > Chrome/Chromium

        Today.

        Previously, it was Firefox > Everything, so that’s why I was asking.

      • Cosmic Cleric
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        58 months ago

        ff forks like librewolf are based

        Heard good things about Librewolf.