Currently viewing the tag: "Web Browser"

Hello, this is the part where I kill you!

It’s been a long time coming, but the day is finally here. I have been using Firefox as my primary web browser since it’s initial release back in 2004 and even toyed around with it in beta before that. I’ve installed it for friends and family because they were having issues with Internet Explorer, and would have gladly recommended it to anyone asking my advice. Don’t get me wrong, I still would recommend it, but there’s a newer faster and more streamlined browser out there called Google Chrome. I’ve used it before, but now it has finally reached the point where by switching I will not miss any of the features or plug-ins/extensions that I know and love about Firefox.

If you, like myself, have been a long-time Firefox user, then the following reasons I’m switching to Chrome may interest you.

  1. Speed
    I haven’t bothered looking with any depth in to benchmarks or anything like that, but when I click that Chrome icon on my dock, it is instantly open. Firefox, however, takes several seconds to show up. Any defender of Firefox, my former self included, would brush this off as the fault of various installed plug-ins, but I’ve tracked down and installed all of the same or comparable Chrome extensions (plus one or two new ones that looked neat) and it still opens like lightning. Page loads seem faster as well, but they were still pretty fast in Firefox once it was open, so that one is a close call.
  2. Extensions
    Whether you call them plug-ins (Firefox) or extensions (Chrome), they are what makes a modern-day browser awesome. AdBlock is obviously a must-have (although I disable it on my favorite sites and/or sites that aren’t completely obnoxious about ads), but some of the other Firefox plugins that I’ve found Chrome counterparts for that are as good or better than those available for Firefox are Chrome SEO, StumbleUpon, and Ultimate Chrome Flag. A big part of what has held be back from switching to Chrome earlier was the lack or limited ability of a few of those.
  3. Standards
    Whether or not you are aware of what web standards are or how they make your web browsing experience better, they are important. Some browsers (I’m looking at you, IE) have long ignored this fact and it has hurt them in the long run. One of the very first things I do when I install a new browser or major update is run the latest Acid test. As seen below, Chrome currently ranks extremely well (Hint: 100/100 is perfect), whereas the latest version of Firefox “only” scores a 97.

  4. PDF Support
    If you, like me, view a lot of PDFs from various websites across the net, then you’d expect your web browser to natively be able to just view them inline without thinking twice. This works flawlessly in Chrome without any 3rd party extensions. In Firefox, however, you used to need a third party extension to get it to work and in the latest version that has stopped working and development on an update is all but abandoned because it would require a rewrite. Why Mozilla doesn’t just integrate this in to Firefox is beyond me, but thankfully Google felt it necessary for Chrome.

So there you have it. On both my home and work computers, Google Chrome is now the primary web browser. Between the speed with which they update it, the ever-growing selection of high quality extensions, and the features already built in, it will likely stay the default web browser on any computer I use for some time to come.

Tagged with:
 

Opera Mini Web Browser
Category: Productivity
Released: April 13th, 2010
Current Version: 5.0
Size: 1 MB
Price: Free

Since the initial release of the iPhone, Safari has been the only real choice for a fully-featured web browser. That time, however, is now at and end. With the release of the Opera Mini Web Browser, iPhone, iPod Touch, and iPad users now have a new option when surfing the web — and it is a good one. Opera boasts pretty much every feature that you can find in Safari and then some.

When you first open up Opera, you will notice the “Speed Dial” screen which displays a grid of 9 configurable website thumbnails to quickly and easily access the sites that you frequent. Like the contact list on your phone, you can have a long list of bookmarks, but the speed dial page allows you to choose the 9 pages you access the most for quick access. The very next thing you’re likely to discover is how much more awesome the implementation of tabs is over Safari. Switching back and forth between multiple tabs is both intuitive and easy, which is exactly how it should be. Another feature that took me a bit longer to discover was something that has been sorely lacking in Safari: The ability to save a picture from the Internet on to your phone. As someone who makes frequent use of the WordPress app, this will be quite the useful little tool. Which brings me to its speed. Everything about it just seems faster, from loading a page to switching tabs and pulling up contextual menus everything is very snappy, even if you aren’t using a 3GS. Even if everything else were on par with Safari, this alone makes Opera stand out.

The few features I just covered are by no means the definitive list. There are plenty of other great things about Opera that make it worth installing. After on a day of use, it has already supplanted Safari as the primary browser on my iPhone and is the very first 3rd party app that has earned a coveted place on my dock next to such rock-star apps as “Phone”, “Messages”, and “Mail”. If you haven’t installed it already, do so now. It is free, easy to get accustomed to, and a huge improvement over Safari.

Tagged with: