Accessibility Specialist. I focus on ensuring content created, events held and company assets are as accessible as possible, for as many people as possible.
Accessibility Specialist. I focus on ensuring content created, events held and company assets are as accessible as possible, for as many people as possible.
Go give it a look, I donβt know how to explain what makes it nicer to use but it just feels better. I tend to be a β100 tabs open at a timeβ person so it might be the tab handling that makes me love it!
Firefox for web dev testing because I recently learnt that it gives you more insight into errors and warnings, and Google Chrome for everything else because it looks nice and is convenient.
Firefox ! Normal et Dev edition. (Dev edition to separate to Sync account and install unsigned extensions). Because it's FOSS, because as a dev the experience is better (contexts, devtools organisation, "Edit and Resend" XHR feature, lot's of extensions (addons.mozilla.org is opensource too)), non profit foundation behind and because I don't trust Google so Chrome is no exception. The design is great and the possibility to customize colors through color.firefox.com is very cool). For non tech users, it already blocks 2000 known trackers (like Google Analytics) (what should be already done with ublock origina and privacy badger if you have installed them).
Because Firefox Sync is very useful !
And to tests web apps with multiple accounts the different contexts possibility is great.
Oldest comments (30)
Firefox:
Nice!
What he said β
π
Better Dev tools too
Team Firefox FTW! Real talk: Google Chrome is fast, but simply put I just do not trust their privacy policy. Cheers mate!
Chrome isn't faster than current versions of Firefox especially with many tabs.
brave for ad blocking
I have seen many ads for brave in the past and actually have it downloaded. It does block ads!
Same here. I think I prefer the Chrome-style dev window over Firefox, and Brave does block ads.. but something keeps drawing me back to Firefox.
Vivaldi for personal browsing, chrome and Firefox for work.
Vivaldi is just a joy to use due to the tab stacking, shortcut customisation being easy and other handy features built in.
I have never heard of Vivaldi before π€.
Go give it a look, I donβt know how to explain what makes it nicer to use but it just feels better. I tend to be a β100 tabs open at a timeβ person so it might be the tab handling that makes me love it!
I. Am. Blown. Away. π€―
Interesting. Still built on chromium though.
Edge, for the ability to "install" web apps and alt+tab to them.
I use edge but have never heard of that feature π€.
I wrote a mini article on it a few weeks ago. It's nice if you are already an alt+tabber
Friend Link: medium.com/subjective-studio/the-b...
Vivaldi, it rocks.
Interesting... π€.
Firefox for web dev testing because I recently learnt that it gives you more insight into errors and warnings, and Google Chrome for everything else because it looks nice and is convenient.
I mainly split my time between Safari & Firefox:
Safari:
Firefox:
Firefox ! Normal et Dev edition. (Dev edition to separate to Sync account and install unsigned extensions). Because it's FOSS, because as a dev the experience is better (contexts, devtools organisation, "Edit and Resend" XHR feature, lot's of extensions (addons.mozilla.org is opensource too)), non profit foundation behind and because I don't trust Google so Chrome is no exception. The design is great and the possibility to customize colors through color.firefox.com is very cool). For non tech users, it already blocks 2000 known trackers (like Google Analytics) (what should be already done with ublock origina and privacy badger if you have installed them).
Because Firefox Sync is very useful !
And to tests web apps with multiple accounts the different contexts possibility is great.
Chrome only. I've been using it since the initial stable release made by Google