• @AgreeableLandscapeOPM
    link
    15
    edit-2
    3 years ago

    I think that too many people still have some trust in “do no evil” Google, so people don’t bother with anything else than the default Google Chrome on their Android phones, or find Firefox too slow on mobile.

    Most tech consumers don’t give two shits about things like ethics of a company, or privacy, or things like that. Also, it’s been shown that Google intentionally hampers their site on Firefox (because when you spoof the user agent to say Chrome without changing anything else it magically works fine), and many large sites not only don’t bother to validate web apps for Firefox, they straight up prevent it from running (again, usually until you spoof the user agent). People with a good grasp on tech will look at this and realize what’s actually happening, but to the average person that uses technology but doesn’t necessarily understand technology, and probably have no idea what a user agent is or how it can be changed, this just looks like Firefox is inferior technologically to Chrome, so they use Chrome thinking it’s intrinsically better.

    • smallcircles
      link
      33 years ago

      I agree on your “don’t give 2 shits” observation. Many people I know don’t even use Chrome but the - still much worse - Samsung browser, and saying that FF is better functionally, speedier, etc. and only takes a second to install doesn’t help. They just don’t care. Same with ad-blockers: “You can have an ad-free internet, and all sites load must faster!” --> Reaction: “Meh… [shrug]”.

      On the whole I never encounter sites that break significantly, let alone don’t run at all. Maybe I’m just lucky then :)

      • @AgreeableLandscapeOPM
        link
        3
        edit-2
        3 years ago

        A lot of the more “advanced” web apps don’t “support” Firefox (though Firefox can usually run them with a user agent spoof). The browser version of Skype for example.