agile-gift0262 a day ago

I switched to Firefox and it's been wonderful. I wonder why I didn't switch earlier. It's only been a couple of months, but I can't imagine going back to a browser without multi-account containers.

  • galangalalgol a day ago

    The only time I've used anything but firefox for the last. Well probably since netscape honestly? I am so old. Is to get the in flight entertainment to work on american, but firefox has worked for that for a few years now. People say chrome is faster and in the early 2000s I might have agreed, but now I really don't understand why anyone not on a mac or iphone isn't using Firefox. It is great.

    • nfriedly a day ago

      Firefox is great on Mac too.

      You have a point about iPhones, though. It's almost pointless, but not quite: it does get a few features, like cross-platform sync. "Real" Firefox is one of the things that keeps me on Android.

      • Melatonic a day ago

        Orion browser using Firefox plugins I have found to work quite well on iOS

        • pkaeding a day ago

          I tried to use Orion as my daily driver on Mac OS (instead of Firefox) but I couldn't get the simplelogin extension to work (it wouldn't authenticate to my account). Also, it was slower than FF (I know, everything says that it is super fast, but that wasn't my experience).

          After a month or so, I gave up and switched back to FF.

      • technofiend a day ago

        I recently discovered that my jetkvm won't work on chrome, firefox or safari in macos, even after trying various workarounds to enable webrtc. The fix was to boot up Fedora in parallels and use Firefox there. In fact I'm thinking about shifting all my browsing to that combination just for further isolation.

        • omnimus a day ago

          I am pretty sure jetkvm works on macos browsers. We have two in office where most people have macs.

      • galangalalgol a day ago

        Can you still get real Firefox on mac? I thought they forced chromium on there now too? The only time I got MacBook I put linux on it within a few months.

    • tmnvix a day ago

      > I really don't understand why anyone not on a mac or iphone isn't using Firefox

      I'm on a mac and happily use Firefox. Have done for over a decade. It would take a lot to encourage me to move to a proprietary browser (Edge, Chrome, Safari).

      Maybe I'm out of touch, but the attachment to Chrome that some people seem to have (despite the outright privacy abuse) is baffling to me. I mean, ffs, are a couple of minor UI compromises (not that I experience any - quite the opposite) enough to justify what I consider a frankly perverted browser experience? I'm inclined to conclude that some people have little self respect - being so willing to metaphorically undress for the big G's benefit.

      • mirekrusin a day ago

        They just don’t know. If you show them internet without ads they are amazed that something like that is possible.

        • bornfreddy 15 hours ago

          That might be true for normal users, but there are many developers who still use Chrome or its derivates in 2025. What excuse do they have?

  • chrsw a day ago

    I still find some pages don't work 100% correctly in Firefox. But not nearly enough to keep me from using it on my personal machines. (My employer doesn't allow any browser except Chrome and Edge). For me, the most important feature of a browser is the web experience. I guess it should be security but I try to be careful about what I do online, regardless of what browser I'm using.

    Many years ago I used to run the Firefox NoScript extension exclusively. For sites that I trusted and visited frequently I would add their domains to an exceptions list. For sites that I wasn't sure about I would load it with all scripts disabled and then selectively kept allowing scripts until the site was functional, starting with the scripts hosted on the same domain as the site I wanted to see/use.

    Eventually I got too lazy to keep doing that but outside of the painstaking overhead it was by far the best web experience I ever had. I started getting pretty good at recognizing what scripts I needed to enable to get the site to load/work. Plus, uBlock Origin and annoyances filters got so good I didn't stress about the web so much any more.

    But all this got me thinking, why not have the browser block all scripts by default, then have an AI agent selectively enable scripts until I get the functionality I need? I can even give feedback to the agent so it can improve over time. This would essentially be automating what I was dong myself years ago. Why wouldn't this work? Do I not understand AI? Or web technology? Or are people already doing this?

    • mrandish a day ago

      > I still find some pages don't work 100% correctly in Firefox.

      Sometimes this is simply because the site preemptively throws an error on detecting Firefox because they don't want to QA another browser with a smaller market share. Usually those sites work fine if you just change the user agent Firefox reports to look like Chrome (there are add-ons for that). Personally, I haven't had to resort to a non-Firefox browser or user agent spoof even once in well over a year now.

    • 1oooqooq a day ago

      > I still find some pages don't work 100% correctly in Firefox.

      find that hard to believe. but even if you find something using an api not implement by firefox, chances are you definitely do not want that feature anyway, the firefox gave in to really awful stuff and only drew the line on obviously egregious privacy violation ones.

      • Faark a day ago

        Yes, it is a thing. I open ms edge every time i want to view logs in our spring boot admin. Same one for one of the jira ticket workflows. Might find the time to look into it someday...

      • chrsw a day ago

        It's rare. But it does happen. Razer had this problem until recently. Looks like they fixed it because I just checked and it seems fine now.

      • quacksilver a day ago

        Sometimes devs rely on Chrome specific quirks, or are shipping broken apps that Chrome manages to make the correct guesses for it to be functional.

        Many see 'it works on Chrome and mobile Safari' as 'it works' and they can get project signoff / ship / get paid / whatever and don't care about other users

        The company that has the application may not know until a few users complain (if they complain) and by that point it could be too late due to the contract, or they may not understand what a different browser is or care either.

  • xg15 a day ago

    That's nice for you, but the monopoly is still there. In fact, you've strengthened Google's side in antitrust proceedings where they pretend they are not a monopoly because a small number of people use Firefox.

    • cherryteastain a day ago

      What do you propose then? Be a browser accelerationist, let Google do whatever the hell they want on your computer, and hope for big daddy government to tell them to stop?

      • xg15 a day ago

        Google is already doing what the hell they want on the vast majority of people's computers. (As are Apple and Microsoft)

        Sure, go ahead and install Firefox, LineageOS, etc. (I did so too and am a happy user of both). But I'm just saying that this is not fighting the monopoly in any way, it's just retreating into a bubble where we can ignore it for a while.

        I have no answers as to what to do instead, but I think acknowledging that a strategy has failed would be a useful first step.

    • worldsayshi a day ago

      Yeah I'm surprised Google isn't imposing the same policies on Firefox. They ought to have considerable influence on Mozilla.

      • bornfreddy 15 hours ago

        They do. They are just more underhanded about it, but no worries, the effect will be the same.

  • heresie-dabord a day ago

    Multi-account containers are brilliant. I recommend the following extensions:

        * uBlock Origin
        * Privacy Badger
        * Multi-Account Containers
        * Flagfox
        * Cookie Autodelete
    • kxrm a day ago

      You really shouldn't double up on ad/tracking blockers. That can cause problems for the predefined filters. Go with one or the other. I prefer uBlock Origin personally.

    • 3eb7988a1663 a day ago

      I also love Multi-Account containers, but the UI is a bit of a mess. I get annoyed each time I have to futz with it.

    • tmtvl a day ago

      I recommend uBlock Origin, Multi-Account Containers, NoScript Security Suite, CanvasBlocker, and Decentraleyes.

    • trinix912 a day ago

      I'd also recommend Consent-O-Matic for auto-clicking through most GDPR cookie notices ;)

  • tzs 19 hours ago

    > I switched to Firefox and it's been wonderful. I wonder why I didn't switch earlier

    Maybe because a few years ago it could be very annoying? It was mostly pretty good at rendering web pages but it had many UI problems that could really get on your nerves after a while.

    For example somewhere around late 2020 or early 2021 after several years of using it as my main browser on my Mac I switched because a couple of those problems finally just got too annoying to me.

    The main one I remember was that I was posting a fair bit on HN and Reddit and Firefox's spell checker had an extraordinarily high false positive rate.

    This was quite baffling, actually, because Firefox uses Hunspell which is the same open source spell checker that LibreOffice, Chrome, MacOS, and many other free and commercial products, and it works great in those with a very low false positive rate.

    Here's the ones I hit and reported: ad hominem, algorithmically, all-nighter, another's, auditable, automata, backlight, ballistically, blacksmithing, bubonic, cantina, chewable, coaxially, commenter, conferenced, counterintuitive, dominator, epicycle, ethicist, exonerations, ferrite, fineable, hatchling, impaction, implementer, implementor, inductor, initializer, intercellular, irrevocability, licensor, lifecycle, manticore, massless, measurer, meerkats, micropayments, mischaracterization, misclassification, misclassified, mistyped, mosquitos, partygoers, passthrough, per se, phosphine, plough, pre-programmed, preprogrammed, programmability, prosecutable, recertification, responder, retransmission, rotator, seatbelt, sensationalistic, shapeshifting, solvability, spectrogram, splitter, subparagraphs, subtractive, surveil, survivorship, synchronizer, tradeoffs, transactional, trichotomy, tunable, underspecified, untraceably, untyped, verifiability, verifier, webmail.

    • flkenosad 14 hours ago

      That's funny. Maybe they need to update the dependency?

    • SilasX 6 hours ago

      Yeah, I've had some weird results from Firefox's spellchecker. It didn't recognize bachelorette or Shabbat, and it insisted on replacing "misclassifying" with "misidentifying". (Hm, doesn't seem to do the latter now.)

  • evo_9 a day ago

    Ditto - I’m on Zen browser a FF fork, it’s a clone of Arc and quite love it. No way I’m going back to chrome or any chromium browsers.

  • vmladenov a day ago

    How do multi-account containers differ from Chrome profiles? I hadn't paid much attention to Firefox outside of Linux installs as I mainly use Safari with Chrome as a backup, but I'm interested to try again.

    • calgoo a day ago

      First, they are color coded / icon specific tabs, not full windows like chrome. I have used it a lot in the past when I'm doing sso testing at work, or logging into 5 or 6 different AWS accounts at the same time. It's really nice to jump from the green tab (Dev) to the red tab (prod) to check some settings or logs. They feel a lot lighter then full on chrome profiles. You can also tie each to specific proxy profiles, so in my last setup we used ssh tunnels to access different environments, so each container connected to different ssh tunnels.

  • worldsayshi a day ago

    The main thing holding me back is lack of pwa support, since there are a few apps that i need to use that only exist as progressive web apps on Linux. And using another browser for pwa has shown to be a bit cumbersome.

    I know pwa is coming back to Firefox soon-ish.

    • slenk a day ago

      Firefox on Windows has PWA support at least

  • guywithahat a day ago

    [flagged]

    • madeofpalk a day ago

      Mozilla is more questionable than Google? By using Brave you're still staying within the Google ecosystem, sending them the signal that their Chromium internet is the better one.

      I swear - people have such a hard on for hating Mozilla because it fails to live up to an impossibly high standard, while giving all the other corporations doing actual harm a free pass.

      • geraldwhen a day ago

        The Mozilla foundation is overtly political. The fact that they also support a browser is secondary.

    • yedpodtrzitko a day ago

      I'll bite - if you dont use Firefox because of "questionable ethics", then I am quite surprised you decided to use Brave, considering their controversies. Also Brave is still based on Chrome's engine, and I dont think they'll be able to maintain their fork long-term, so if the reason to switch was to break the Chrome monopoly, then I'm not sure this switch really counts.

    • myko a day ago

      Brave seems much more questionable concerning ethics, given Eich's history

      • guywithahat a day ago

        I'm sure Eich has political opinions, but he doesn't use the Brave blog to push them and he doesn't impose them on his contractors or customers in the way Mozilla does.

Etheryte a day ago

I don't know, I switched to Safari and it was painful for like two hours and then I stopped thinking about it. The only thing I somewhat miss is the built-in page translate, but I don't need it often enough to be bothered much.

  • notatoad a day ago

    switching to safari because chrome disabled the good adblockers is completely counter-productive. safari has never supported the good adblockers.

  • Fire-Dragon-DoL a day ago

    I find switching from chrome to safari essentially doing nothing. If you switched to a non-big-company owned browser, it would make sense but Apple has plenty of lock in which is as bad as chrome lock in.

    • fny a day ago

      I'm a huge fan of Orion by Kagi: you should have a look! It's a little rough around the edges but the extension support on iOS is amazing.

      • const_cast a day ago

        Orion is the only viable option on iOS IMO. The fact that, to this day, Safari has no way to block ads on iOS means it's just awful. Before Orion, I avoided using my web browser like the plague, because the experience was just bad.

        Now I'm on Android, and Ironfox is pretty good and Firefox is also available. The browser story on Android is leaps and bounds ahead of iOS.

    • creato a day ago

      It's especially silly in this case because Safari extensions have always been equivalent to MV3 functionality.

      • lapcat a day ago

        This is not accurate. Safari had webRequestBlocking functionality from 2010 to 2019 and indeed a version of uBlock Origin for Safari. What is true is that Safari was the first browser to ditch webRequestBlocking, replaced by its Apple-specific static rule content blocker API.

        Otherwise, though, Safari still supports MV2. Everyone seems to think webRequestBlocking is the only relevant change in MV3, but it's not. Equally important IMO is arbitrary JavaScript injection into web pages, which MV2 allows but MV3 does not.

        MV3 is so locked down that you can't even use String.replace() with a constructed JavaScript function. It's really a nightmare.

        Google's excuse is that all JavaScript needs to be statically declared in the extension so that the Chrome Web Store can review it. But then the Chrome Web Store allows a bunch of malware to be published anyway!

    • zer00eyz a day ago

      I don't think in this case your argument is as clear cut and the use cases that people have today arent solved by the choices out there.

      George Carlin: "You don't need a formal conspiracy when interests converge. These people went to the same universities, they're on the same boards of directors, they're in the same country clubs, they have like interests, they don't need to call a meeting, they know what's good for them and they're getting it."

      The interests of APPLE (who makes money on hardware, and credit card processing) don't align with the interests of Google (who makes money on ad's). I am all for open source, I'm all for alternatives. But honestly if you own an iPhone and a Mac then safari makes a lot of sense. I happen to use safari and Firefox on Mac and am happy to bounce back and forth.

      I also keep an eye on ladybird, but it isnt ready for prime time.

      And I'm still going to have a chrome install for easy flashing of devices.

    • vehemenz a day ago

      Apple isn’t selling my data, and they make the best consumer hardware, so at this point there aren’t many downsides to Apple lock in.

      • scarface_74 a day ago

        No company sells your data. They sell access to you based on the data they have about you. Apple is no different

  • mattkevan a day ago

    Safari has had built-in page translate for years now. It’ll detect different languages and show a translate option in the site tools menu. Works well.

    • Etheryte a day ago

      I'm aware of this, but in my experience it's pretty bad. It doesn't even cover all European languages, never mind the rest of the world. For the languages it does support, it's always a lottery whether it works with that specific site or not. I've tried using it a few times, but it's not even remotely close to what Chrome does.

lytedev a day ago

It definitely is, buy I think the silent majority just don't care all that much. Is that what you're referring to?