90% of the time Google Chrome
The other 10% is split between Firefox and Vivaldi.
I know I'm the monster that sleeps under your bed at night, but I like Chrome
90% of the time Google Chrome
The other 10% is split between Firefox and Vivaldi.
I know I'm the monster that sleeps under your bed at night, but I like Chrome
Firefox : Solus
Chrome : Android
Firefox on every platform except my 10' hybrid/convertible Windows 10 notebook, whose limited resources and touchscreen prefer Microsoft Edge over every alternative tried so far.
Justin I look for it by that means and it leaves a version 58.0.3135.90 of 07-Mar-2019 and already there is a new version 60.0.3255.27 of 09-Apr-2019 that is the one that I would like to install because if there was a way of oneself not is through the installation of debian packages do not say yo then that new version is very nice
harelt
It has not been updated on Solus yet. I have submitted the update, you'll have to wait for it to be approved, and make it's way to the stable repository. https://dev.getsol.us/D6023
Fatih19 Not OP, but in Firefox, top right click the settings/hamburger menu icon, then scroll down to where it says Customize and a new tab will open up to adjust some visual settings. If you look on the very bottom of the window you'll see a tick box for "Title Bar" and uncheck that to turn off the title bar.
Scotty-Trees Thanks, it looks like Chrome now.
I love Brave at the moment...
SOLUSfiddler the work around for icons not disappearing in the menu is "pkill budgie-panel" from the terminal, quiker than log out and log in or restart
eljondy If you're going to go nuclear with it, it's probably better to do budgie-panel --replace &!
instead. That will replace the current Budgie instance with a new one.
The browser with the least amount of votes should get relegated to be drop kicked from the distro lol, jk
Lol, not a bad point...a pretty democratic way of deciding.
Scotty-Trees You'll never take my Lynx. Everything I need is 250 clicks and scrolls away. You can view it through cool-retro-terminal, to boot, for the 1968 space launch feel, which is way before my computing time, but hey, forefathers and stuff.
PS. lynx before proprietary for sure (but kidding aside not my daily driver)
Ditto to eljondy, less people use brave than I thought. Also more people use Firefox over Chrome than I thought. Interesting results so far.
A decade ago it was Firefox, but it kept on getting slower and slower. I held up as much as I could before I moved tho Chrome but there really wasn't any choice. Then, when I got fed up with Google knowing more about me then well, me I started looking for something else.
IE? insecure. Edge? nice features, not really secure. Opera? abandoned it's own engine and is now owned by a Chinese company, make of that what you will. Pale Moon? it's based on the Gecko engine I left behind when I abandoned FF a decade ago. FF wasn't stable and was slaw a decade ago, and most privacy orientated browser that are spin offs of that particular engine, while they might still support the old extensions suffer from the same slowness, crashes and bugs FF did. Vivaldi? no android browser and I found it buggy, also, most of the features it boasted were already in M$ Edge, on windows at least there is no reason to use that browser over edge, and there isn't a reason to use Edge in the first place. Firefox Quantum - actually a pretty decent browser, almost as fast as Chrome if not faster in some instances. Somewhat more secure though... Mozilla hasn't been the friend of the FOSS community it has historically claimed to be and a series of forced adons have made be weary of FF Quantum and Mozilla in general.
So, what's left? terminal browser... but I have a life so no thank you and Brave. Brave is good. When I first tried it it was the weak before they release their first Chromium based browser. The brave that was based on Muon that in turn was based on Electron that in turn was based on Chromium that in turn is the open source version of Chrome was... acceptable. The new Chromium based browser is actually fairly decent. And since I've started transitioning to Solus from Windows 10 it's proven to be fairly reliable on both platforms. The fact that I don't need a separate browser to visit the dark web is ok - and since I don't actually make use of the "dark" part of the dark web but use it mostly as a way to circumvent local restrictions it's more then enough for me. It's not perfect though, and for actual anonymity TOR browser on Tails is still needed and even for banking and such I'd recommend FF Quantum with a few adons over Brave. But for a, install and surf kind of browser, Brave is more then fine.
This all being said, I never tried Epiphany or any of the other actually Linux browsers. Are they worth a try?
Girtablulu Haven't you read Kyrios' reply? there are only three choices. Since Terminal browser aren't based neither on Webkit/blik nor Gecko/Servo that means they're in the obsolete category.
AlucardNoir Chrome is based on Chromium, not the other way round.