I recently switched from Google Chrome to Mozilla Firefox as my main desktop browser. Here’s what I did to improve upon Firefox’ sometimes not ideal defaults. There are a couple of reasons why I considered the switch from Chrome to Firefox: A growing uneasy feeling about Google’s approach to us...
@bentropy@koorool while im used to using userChrome it would be good to have a gui tool for those not familiar with inspector tools and css. I don't think the extension api grants the access needed for an extension to work
For what it's worth there are a great number of ready made css snippets you can use
Eh, I don't see these as problems (except maybe the font rendering). It all sounds like the writer is nitpicking because Firefox is just a "different" browser that does the same things in a different way.
I recently switched from Chrome to Firefox as part of an ongoing de-Google effort... and, honestly, I found it fairly easy. The two things I missed and found solutions for were:
Profiles - I just use the built in profiles with the Profile Switcher extension
Casting to Chromecast - I use the fx_cast extension and actually find it more reliable than Chrome's casting!
Other than those, I've found it to be a very comfortable, familiar experience.
It can be made to work in largely the same way. You just need to install the extra plugin (and associated extra component). I have a similar number of profiles as you and I haven't had to change how I work.
The article comments reference Multi-Account Containers, but I'm not sure I could make them work. I need different bookmarks for each profile, and I like the separation of a new window.
"The very first Mozilla logo, after the decline of Netscape, was a phoenix reborn from its flames. When they had to change their name, they opted for an animal that was not well known on the web at the time. It was the red panda. Unfortunately, people thought that the animal on the Mozilla Firefox logo was a fox. This "firefox" is actually a red panda which is a protected species in Asia. A mistake when translating red panda from Chinese to English is how we got firefox.".
The only issue I've noticed is #3 (tab management). Currently I use the Tab Groups extension to help keep a manageable amount of tabs visible and to help unload idle tabs from ram.
This isn't general use helpful tips. This is one users personal wants because he wants to use a new tool, but wants it to behave like the old tool. Stupid mentality,.if you want the old.tool, use it. The only real.complaint here is the font rendering, and every engine will handle fonts differently.
The only one I see as a problem (IMO) is #4 - I wish there was a similar downloads bar, especially because I always clean up the download list after I'm done with it.
After using Firefox for years I'm sure I'd have more problems going back to chromium browsers than migrating to Firefox in the first place. Firefox has a much better support to keyboard navigation when it comes to reopening bookmarks and keyword searches. But it's good to address these differences and how to work around them.
For me, Edge's vertical tabs and grouping is so seamless that it is necessary for my workflow. I have tried so many alternatives on Firefox, but there is always something that makes it feel so half-baked.
If you're the author, you might be interested to know that there's an in-browser profile manager too: type about:profiles in the address bar.
This page shows all your profiles along with where is their data stored, and it also allows you to open them, delete them, create a new one, or set the default but beware that creating a new one will make that the default.
This article makes me realize how not picky I am! Besides the profile switcher all these tips are just personal preferences that the author wanted to have in Firefox and were all things I've never even noticed