![]() ![]() This is exactly what happened to me recently.įor at least the last 12 months I had been using Grunt and the LiveReload browser extension to inject CSS when my files changed. No (ext.) possible with 3rd party browser extension and hiding native tar bar with userChrome.cssĬonfigurable placement of new tabs e.g.The ability to inject newly-modified CSS on every file change (without reloading the page) is the type of workflow-enhancement that you never truly appreciate… until you lose it. Hidden in brave://flags (ext.) possible with 3rd party browser extensionĭropped (v45) (ext.) possible with 3rd party browser extensionĬhange between horizontal and vertical tabs ![]() ![]() Yes (ext.) possible with 3rd party browser extension Hidden in edge://flags (ext.) possible with 3rd party browser extension Hidden in chrome://flags (ext.) possible with 3rd party browser extension Hidden in opera://flags (ext.) possible with 3rd party browser extensionĮnforce dark theme for websites changes the website to a dark design to match the browser's or operating system's dark themeĮxperimental currently only available in Firefox Nightly (ext.) possible with 3rd party browser extension Rather than save them in the Downloads folder ("Save")ĭropped (v97) feature was dropped in v97 but Firefox developers have announced that it will be brought back in the future with a setting in about:configĭropped (v79) (ext.) possible with 3rd party browser extension Temporary downloads ("Open" file) download files into a temporary location ("Open") Limited E2E encryption only for passwords, or when using a school or work accountĪutofill (passwords, addresses, payments)ĭynamic text reflow when zooming line breaks adjust to avoid horizontal scrolling Optional E2E encryption only passwords encrypted by default Hidden in about:config (ext.) possible with 3rd party browser extension Redirect Google AMP pages to original URLĭropped (v74) (ext.) possible with 3rd party browser extensionĭropped (v61) (ext.) possible with 3rd party browser extensionĭropped (v2.5) (ext.) possible with 3rd party browser extension blocking of "acceptable ads" and "non-intrusive ads" Yes WebKit's "Intelligent Tracking Protection" applies to all iOS browsersĪd blocking (cosmetic, alongside trackers) incl. Tracking protection can include blocking of tracking scripts, third-party cookies, URL tracking parameters, fingerprinting attempts via canvas or supercookies, and more No (ext.) possible with 3rd party browser extension Estimated market share based on monthly active users is " to search for in Bing source: TheCounter 2002-07, StatCounter 2008-21īrave is included in Chrome's market share as it uses Chrome's user agent string.desktop in darker, mobile in lighter shading. ![]() Gecko/SpiderMonkey in very early versions Presto/Carakan until 2013 + in Opera Mini Proprietary except for browser engine components licensed under GNU GPL that were inherited from Konqueror's KHTML/KJS engine but source code availableįorked from Safari, based on Chromium (the unbranded, FOSS version of Chrome)ġ994 Netscape → '98 Mozilla → '02 Firefox Proprietary except for browser engine components licensed under GNU GPL that were inherited from Konqueror's KHTML/KJS engine Last updated: September 2022 Show Desktop browsers Show Android browsers Show iOS browsers Ironically, the "worst" browsers have the highest market shares, thanks to their being preinstalled on iOS and Android. In terms of pure features, Vivaldi, Opera and Firefox are at the top of list, followed by Edge and Brave, with Chrome and Safari being the most "bare-bones" and least customizable browsers. The result of the comparison is less clear than last time. I have decided to limit my test to these 7 browsers as they are both available on PCs and on phones (unlike for example Pale Moon, which stopped developing its mobile version), and also have decided against including "regional" browsers such as Yandex Browser (Russia), Naver Whale (Korea) or the Chinese browsers (Baidu, 360, Sogou, QQ. Until 2016, there were the "Big 5" browsers (Firefox, IE/Edge, Chrome, Opera, and Safari), but since then the market has become more fragmented with new browsers such as Brave and Vivaldi becoming more popular. This comparison compares the most popular cross-platform (desktop and mobile) browsers and their features. Timeline of Default Desktop EnvironmentsĬomparison of Cloud, Sync & Email providers Comparison of Web Browsers Comparison of Operating SystemsĬomparison & List of Desktop Environments ![]()
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