I think the management’s recent decisions, as well as the removal/lack of power-user features for those users, have moved a lot of people away from Firefox, myself included. They really need to focus on providing really good software, not get caught up in trying to chase trends or forcing services people don’t want. This WIRED article does a good job explaining the issues.
I am keeping an eye on Pulse Browser, which is an experimental fork of Firefox with uBlock Origin pre-installed and some UI customisations. They’ve got a sidebar with “web panels” very much like Vivaldi’s Panels, and they’ve got vertical tabs like Edge. People also seem to be posting suggestions to their discussion page on GitHub. It’s early days, but if they listen and try to implement some of the suggested features to their best ability, it could be a much better Firefox than Firefox itself.
Edit: From Pulse’s Discord, I just found out Mozilla bought Fakespot and are integrating that into Firefox. Some people are definitely going to think that’s bloat.
Oh, I support Gecko. More browser engines to compete against Chromium the better. I just can’t use Firefox in its current state right now. Thankfully, Pulse seems to be picking up the slack in places.
Edit: I’ve thought about it a bit, and honestly, even if you choose a fork of Firefox, that still supports Firefox. If Brave, Vivaldi, Opera and Edge are all Chromium and that’s a reason that Chromium has flourished, the same will ring true for anything that forks Firefox. One of Pulse’s aims is to make tooling for building a Firefox-based browser easier, and their fork is part of that.
No problem! Tree Style Tabs might also do the job on base Firefox with nested tabs, but it’s not as streamlined as Pulse or Edge, especially if you want to hide the tab bar (you have to edit .CSS files).
edit: okay enabling both features, moving the main side panel to the right and enable tab collapsing makes a great space-saving setup.
I think you might have misinterpreted that article, it’s asking if Firefox is OK because of Chrome’s dominant market-share, not because of any major issues with Firefox. In fact, Firefox has only gotten better lately.
Firefox uses their own engine IIRC, that’s why more people should be using it so we can get some competition with Chromium.
I think the management’s recent decisions, as well as the removal/lack of power-user features for those users, have moved a lot of people away from Firefox, myself included. They really need to focus on providing really good software, not get caught up in trying to chase trends or forcing services people don’t want. This WIRED article does a good job explaining the issues.
I am keeping an eye on Pulse Browser, which is an experimental fork of Firefox with uBlock Origin pre-installed and some UI customisations. They’ve got a sidebar with “web panels” very much like Vivaldi’s Panels, and they’ve got vertical tabs like Edge. People also seem to be posting suggestions to their discussion page on GitHub. It’s early days, but if they listen and try to implement some of the suggested features to their best ability, it could be a much better Firefox than Firefox itself.
Edit: From Pulse’s Discord, I just found out Mozilla bought Fakespot and are integrating that into Firefox. Some people are definitely going to think that’s bloat.
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Oh, I support Gecko. More browser engines to compete against Chromium the better. I just can’t use Firefox in its current state right now. Thankfully, Pulse seems to be picking up the slack in places.
Edit: I’ve thought about it a bit, and honestly, even if you choose a fork of Firefox, that still supports Firefox. If Brave, Vivaldi, Opera and Edge are all Chromium and that’s a reason that Chromium has flourished, the same will ring true for anything that forks Firefox. One of Pulse’s aims is to make tooling for building a Firefox-based browser easier, and their fork is part of that.
Thank you for mentioning a *fork of a non-chromium browser with vertical tabs, genuinely something FF would benefit from.
No problem! Tree Style Tabs might also do the job on base Firefox with nested tabs, but it’s not as streamlined as Pulse or Edge, especially if you want to hide the tab bar (you have to edit .CSS files).
edit: okay enabling both features, moving the main side panel to the right and enable tab collapsing makes a great space-saving setup.
edit 2: now i’m using pulse as my main browser
I think you might have misinterpreted that article, it’s asking if Firefox is OK because of Chrome’s dominant market-share, not because of any major issues with Firefox. In fact, Firefox has only gotten better lately.
@Flaky @FluffyToaster621 I wonder how chrome got big…
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