The title is err, not correct because the top 2 alternatives Opera and Arc are based on Chromium engine. I have seen tons of people swear by Arc, but I am seriously asking (since as a Linux user I can’t use it), how much good can a browser be in this day and age if ultimately it’s ad blocking breaks and it will since Manifest v2 will go soon(unless Arc folks have a solution for it)

The rest alternatives are Firefox, Zen (FF fork but honestly Atleast this was something new I learned from this article) and Tor (which is weird since it is not meant for normal web browsing and using it will not only be slow but put additional strain on the nodes, correct me if I am wrong).

  • @killeronthecorner@lemmy.world
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    11018 days ago

    I switched from Firefox to Floorp and haven’t looked back. Less bloated, same features, haven’t found an extension that isn’t compatible yet.

    Same with Fennec on Android.

    This article is pretty poor overall. Why recommend Arc, a browser that requires a user account to even open a webpage, and which the author himself said will probably be disappearing in the near future as part of their own product strategy?

    Lame clickbait aimed at nobody.

      • Clot
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        1318 days ago

        For me, librewolf focuses too much on privacy sacrificing features, I personally dont like zen’s design. There’s others like waterfox but didnt tried them

      • @killeronthecorner@lemmy.world
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        118 days ago

        It sounded on base value like the least effort when switching from Firefox. It basically came down to Floorp and LW. I tried the former first and didn’t see a need to continue looking.

    • @trueheresy@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1018 days ago

      This is interesting as I’ve not even heard of Floorp and alternatives have been such a hot topic the last month between manifest v3 and firefoxes updated terms fiasco.

      Can I ask, what for you had you opt for floorp vs the more commonly mentioned alternatives like Librewolf, Waterfox, etc.?

      • @aqua_cat@pawb.social
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        1018 days ago

        I at least switched to Floorp for more customization options and funny name, but back then Floorp also had vertical tabs and side-dock before any other Firefox fork (afaik).

      • @killeronthecorner@lemmy.world
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        218 days ago

        It sounded like the easiest migration from FF, and I tried it first out of the options I had lined up to consider (inc. LibreWolf). I expect LW is great too, but I’m time poor and until Floorp gives me a reason to switch, I’ll stick with it.

    • @klu9@lemmy.ca
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      618 days ago

      Have you tried Firedragon? Floorp-based but with some eye candy and privacy enhancements. (Linux only at the moment)

    • @jef@lemm.ee
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      518 days ago

      Floorp is a nightmare from my experience, I’ve tried it about 2 years ago, it was pretty cool but insanely buggy, I’ve been trying it maybe once every 2 months ever since and it hasn’t gotten better IMO, if you customize almost anything in the ui, things will break eventually, and I always get frequent freezes and crashes.

      At this point I just use Firefox with Betterfox user.JS and its been great, you get ff updates as fast as they come out since it’s not a frok, also has all bloat and telemetry disabled, whenever I try out another browser I just switch back to ff for one reason or another.

      • Bilb!
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        318 days ago

        I wonder if floorp has improved, because people are talking it up lately. My experience a few months ago was like yours, it was very buggy.

        • @jef@lemm.ee
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          217 days ago

          Last I’ve tried it was about a week ago, it was as I described. FYI I am on a mac, so Linux/windows might be less buggy, not sure.

          • Bilb!
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            117 days ago

            I was using the flatpak on Linux.

      • @killeronthecorner@lemmy.world
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        117 days ago

        I haven’t had many bugs but I’m primarily using it on a MacBook, so maybe it’s more stable than on Linux? Though that in itself would also be a bother as I have a Linux desktop that I want to install on, so I’ll be looking out for these issues when I do.

      • _cryptagion [he/him]
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        117 days ago

        I’ve been using it on Linux for months and have had zero issues. FIrefox, on the other hand, constantly crashes. When it even opens in the first place.

    • Clot
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      418 days ago

      Exactly the same. Floorp Fennec ftw

        • fmstrat
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          114 days ago

          Thanks Fennec I use, I haven’t tried Mull yet. Sounds dumb but I’m constantly looking for Android FF forks so I can use them for other profiles. Really wish mobile FF would get proper profile support.

    • @Darken@reddthat.com
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      17 days ago

      This list to me feels like AI trying to average the commoner internet

      And the comments here really show it

    • BlueÆther
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      9918 days ago

      I beg to differ, when Opera had its own engine and wasn’t Chinese owned - back in the early '00s.

      • @kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deOP
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        2418 days ago

        Opera also was a good alternative on Symbian phones right or whatever OS Nokia used before they switched to Windows Phone, I think.

        • @Rinox@feddit.it
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          418 days ago

          Opera mini was also great when I had very little MBs of internet traffic in my plan. Nowadays I have pretty much infinite traffic, so I haven’t used it in ages

          • @kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deOP
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            17 days ago

            I think I remember Opera Mini’s layout though I didn’t much use it. It was a great alternative especially on mobile more than a decade back.

            But yes especially after changing ownership, switching browser engines and years down the line; things have changed.

            I think I gave their desktop variant a try sometime ago but didn’t find it compelling enough. I haven’t even used their Android fork. I keep using a Firefox fork only :p.

        • BlueÆther
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          1018 days ago

          I suspect that we may be looking back with rose tinted glasses, but the main stream internet is pretty crap atm

      • @Damage@feddit.it
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        1718 days ago

        Opera was so good. Disable images, force custom CSS, gestures! Stuff no one else had at the time.

          • @philpo@feddit.org
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            317 days ago

            And it has some options to interpret data following strict W3C standards. Which was incredibly helpful when learning, as it encouraged me (and a lot of others) to don’t go down the IE/Netscape and later Chrome “specialities” road. (Yes,I am that old…I still remember MS fucking FrontPage)

        • WFH
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          118 days ago

          gestures!

          Still the reason that 20+ years later the second thing I install on any browser is a gestures extension (the first one is always uBlock Origin, obviously).

      • @tomjuggler@lemmy.world
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        618 days ago

        Yeah I was 100% Opera on desktop and mobile until they switched to chromium and broke everything from before. Still pissed about that, lost all my bookmarks and notes at one point.

    • @klu9@lemmy.ca
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      2718 days ago

      As someone who used Opera 2002-2013 (Presto era), I quibble with the “always”.

      But I do not quibble with the “is”.

        • @klu9@lemmy.ca
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          217 days ago

          Yeah, me too. Never used it since.

          So I was glad when Opera co-founder von Tetzchner announced Vivaldi, and I did use it for a couple of years. But I don’t want to become dependent on something not completely FLOSS, so lately using mainly Firefox mods like Floorp, Zen and Firedragon.

          • @sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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            317 days ago

            My history w/ browsers:

            1. IE - everyone started here
            2. Firefox - switched once I heard about it
            3. Chrome - when it came out, it was fast, which was cool
            4. Opera - switched as soon as I heard about it; was about as fast as Chrome
            5. Firefox - switched when Opera became a Chromium browser

            Since I came from old IE days and started my career having to backport stuff to IE, I care a lot about engine competition, because IE owning everything made everything worse. So that’s still my #1 concern today, hence why I use Firefox.

            I do dabble with Firefox forks though. I use Fennec on my phone, am trying out Mullvad on my laptop, etc. But I’m going to stay within the Gecko-family of browsers until a viable alternative to Blink (Chrome’s engine) emerges (e.g. Servo or LadyBird).

      • @kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deOP
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        618 days ago

        Many sites have become worse. I think stuff like Cnet, PCMag (which still has a digital magazine I think)were much better in the previous era.

    • @Zizzy@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      718 days ago

      Yep. Dont use Opera. They are known for being an incredibly scummy company that has done illegal things. Im 98% sure opera gx is spyware

    • @wedge@lemmy.one
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      217 days ago

      It was an excellent standalone install porn browser for a couple of decades. God seed Opera… God speed.

    • _cryptagion [he/him]
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      1617 days ago

      And funded by a right-wing billionaire who owns the largest corporate intelligence agency on the planet. Your data is not safe with Brave.

      • @rottingleaf@lemmy.world
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        317 days ago

        Except your data not being safe with Brave doesn’t depend on who owns it. It’s a technical conclusion that should follow from technical traits of a system. Those are such that using a modern web browser to do modern web things is not secure period.

    • @douglasg14b@lemmy.world
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      817 days ago

      Always has been.

      Right beside the fact that their monetary model relies on user activity tracking. Yet they advertise privacy.

      A browser that had a seemingly unlimited budget for advertising before it even had users is suspicious as hell.

      I’ve never trusted brave.

  • /home/pineapplelover
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    17 days ago

    Eww opera, at least it’s slightly better than opera gx

    Edit: TOR? I stopped treating this guy seriously once I read this. Nobody uses TOR for regular browsing. They’re full of shit.

    • @Manalith@midwest.social
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      017 days ago

      I tried Opera GX because it advertised the ability limit RAM consumption, and then I found out that the lowest it could go was 1GB which was not as low as I wanted.

  • stochastictrebuchet
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    1618 days ago

    I’ve really been enjoying Vivaldi. It’s also Chromium-based. It’s easy to customize and it has really good tab management. You can group tabs into workspaces, open split panes, and – this one I really appreciate – you can stack tabs by domain. Added bonus is that the company behind it, Vivaldi Technologies, is Norwegian, which ticks the ‘shop European’ box for me.

    As for ad blocking, the shittiness of manifest v3 made me look at options outside the browser rather than rely on extensions. These days I pass all my traffic through adguard, which filters out ads from the request responses. All in all this has been a positive step, because now I can play around with any browser without ever seeing ads.

    • L3ft_F13ld!
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      18 days ago

      DNS blocking (such as AdGuard) doesn’t work for everything. Ad blocking extensions are the only way to block YouTube ads in your browser as far as I know.

      • stochastictrebuchet
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        418 days ago

        AdGuard does more than DNS blocking. It strips ads from the response content.

        Haven’t seen a single YT ad

    • @wingsfortheirsmiles@feddit.uk
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      718 days ago

      I like Vivaldi but all the manifest V3 stuff just pushed me to Librewolf for everything whether it works or not, so maybe I should “thank” Google

    • stochastictrebuchet
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      618 days ago

      Gotta say, it’s kind of a bummer to be downvoted for sharing my own experience. Are those ‘disagree’ or ‘doesn’t contribute to discussion’ votes?

      • Engywook
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        18 days ago

        I’ll link an unpopular opinion I posted yesterday: https://lemm.ee/post/59167603

        My own comment has been: “Don’t you dare to have opinions that don’t align with mainstream thinking here”.

        Here either you praise Mozilla/Firefox/Gecko or you are insulted and treated like a pest. And that’s a deterrent for me to even look at Mozilla/Firefox/Gecko. I prefer not to be part of that community.

        • Ulrich
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          318 days ago

          And that’s a deterrent for me to even look at Mozilla/Firefox/Gecko. I prefer not to be part of that community.

          That’s a very childish mentality. You don’t have to be part of a community. It’s just a browser.

          • Engywook
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            18 days ago

            Let me rephrase it, then: I prefer not to give market share or voice to Mozilla and their shitty community. I consider FF a mediocre browser anyway.

            And I didn’t insult you, so you can shove that “childish” elsewhere.

            • @prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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              217 days ago

              I didn’t see it as an insult… The mindset of, “I don’t like the people who like x, so I won’t even try x before trashing it,” is objectively childish.

      • @morrowind@lemmy.ml
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        118 days ago

        They’re “how dare you tout a chromium browser” votes. The FF circlejerk is and has been crazy for a while now

        • Ulrich
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          318 days ago

          It’s not crazy. Google is doing the damndest to destroy the internet as we know it and using those browsers makes you complicit in that destruction.

    • @ghost_towels@sh.itjust.works
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      418 days ago

      I’ll second Vivaldi! There’s no other browser with that kind of tab and workspace management. It’s how my brain works. The mobile app is great too with tab groups and the sync between the two is fast. I keep Librewolf on my laptop as well for the odd website that only likes FF.

    • Engywook
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      218 days ago

      AdGuard (the app, not the extension or the DNS) should do it. I guess.

    • @VeloRama@feddit.org
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      218 days ago

      Vivaldi is great, but because of manifest v3 i’m looking for alternatives. Firefox is not an alternative for me because of the privacy stuff they changed recently.

    • @kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deOP
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      118 days ago

      I gave Vivaldi a try way back in its early days when I was on Windows. IIRC, it was bundled with lots of features even then and I think, for some weird reason, had Philips Hue Lighting support integrated (unless I am really confusing it with something other, this is multiple years old experience of mine).

      I used it as my main browser for Atleast couple of months then.

  • @scarabic@lemmy.world
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    1418 days ago

    Ironically, I could not reach the end of the list because the fucking ads kept reloading the page and scrolling me to the top. Anyone know which of these 6 would block that?

  • Em Adespoton
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    917 days ago

    Of that list, Zen is the only one really worth considering. And then you have the “but the best one that supports widevine” issue.

    • @kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deOP
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      317 days ago

      Firefox can do so too with TST or one of the other extensions in the store. Sometimes(atleast for me), they introduce slightly more lag when opening the browser but otherwise, they can do much of the job. I use Tree Style Tabs even though I might not be a power user of it (read:not actively using every nitty gritty of the extension).

      • @RexWrexWrecks@lemmy.world
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        217 days ago

        I agree. I’m a pretty happy Firefox user. I am not a power-user of tabs anyway, I try to keep my open tabs to a minimum.

    • palordrolap
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      1118 days ago

      Google could close the Chromium source at any time. There might be promises and provisions that they’ll never do that, but if they do, who has the money to sue them? And who, of those, can’t be bought?

      “So what, people can run with the last good codebase!”

      Sure, until there’s a critical bug that Google don’t publish which then cripples Chromium until the maintainers figure it out, or else Google (deliberately or otherwise) take web standards down an unexpected path requiring massive changes, also making life hard for the fork maintainers.

      And don’t say “that’ll never happen”. Need I gesture broadly at the state of the world?

      • Engywook
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        18 days ago

        Whatever. Chromium is not Chrome, at the moment, so the title is correct. What may happen in 2,5 or 10 years from now is largely irrelevant at this time.

        Nobody is going to ditch their favourite browser (or any other tool) because of the rants of some random netizen/website.

      • Ulrich
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        -118 days ago

        Strawman.

        Your argument is that Chrome and Chromium are bad

        The discussion being had is that Chrome != Chromium

        • palordrolap
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          118 days ago

          My roof and my walls are not the same thing, but if demolish my walls, will my roof hover there magically?

          • Ulrich
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            18 days ago

            I really don’t know what’s so difficult about this. It does’t matter what happens to the walls or roof, the fact remains that they’re not the same thing. I mean unless you take your roof off and make it a wall and vise versa, then yes!

  • @Lasagna@lemmy.ml
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    418 days ago

    Arc is very nice for my workflow, quite a different take on what a browser can be. But I’d say you’re not missing out too much as it’s, unfortunately, no longer in active development.

    They still update chromium regularly, but they’re no longer working on functionality or bug fixes because it’s “done” or something. 🤷‍♂️

    • @kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deOP
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      418 days ago

      I am surprised they abandoned it. It was originally launched as a macOS variant only, correct? And Mac users praised it a lot, on the Web. I thought with that level of traction they will keep going.

      In contrast, there are projects that have a much lower user base though vocal (read: Pale Moon) and despite struggling with half of the available modern Web pages, those projects still keep going.

      • @Lasagna@lemmy.ml
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        718 days ago

        Yeah I was surprised as well, but apparently they’re working in a new browser.

        It’s an interesting approach where you can take all the learnings from the first product and then put it into a follow-up product.

        I hope they’re continuing the ARC direction, just not based on Chromium. But I’m afraid they’re going all in on some sort of AI browser…

        • @Plebcouncilman@sh.itjust.works
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          118 days ago

          Look they just don’t actually know how to make money out of it.

          My intuition is that they should simply charge $3-5 per month and most users would probably choose it over every else if they prioritize privacy as a part of the sub. But I guess they are too afraid to charge for a browser.

  • @quid_pro_joe@infosec.pub
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    417 days ago

    I didn’t see Waterfox mentioned in the article or comments, so I’m giving it a shout out now. Firefox is still my #1 browser, which I have synced to all my critical accounts, and use very cautiously, only using a few trustwothy extensions. However, when I want to explore unfamiliar domains or experiment with lesser-known browser extensions, I’ve relied on the equally dependable Waterfox browser. It’s fast, free, and 99% the same as Firefox except it’s a completely different app so you can basically have 2 Firefoxes set up and customized for completely different roles. Between the two, I can keep Chrome frozen on my phone and off my desktop (although I have a portable Chromium on USB for emergencies).

    • @daq@lemmy.sdf.org
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      817 days ago

      You do know Firefox has profiles you can use to effectively make it two (or more) separate browsers?

      Not shitting on Waterfox, just FYI.

      • @quid_pro_joe@infosec.pub
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        115 days ago

        I do, and have used them in the past. However I’ve had issues with the profiles getting corrupted. Could be user error ;) Installing Waterfox was easier than trying to sort out my profiles.ini and so as you know, nothing is more permanent than a temporary fix :D

    • @kirk781@discuss.tchncs.deOP
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      117 days ago

      I have Waterfox setup as an alternative browser but it does not have much stuff to differentiate itself from mainstream FF, as you said.