- #SAFARI VS FIREFOX HIGH SIERRA REDDIT UPGRADE#
- #SAFARI VS FIREFOX HIGH SIERRA REDDIT MAC#
- #SAFARI VS FIREFOX HIGH SIERRA REDDIT WINDOWS#
First off, I hate 'vs.' topics, and I'm not looking to start a fanboy flame war, but as a n00b mac owner, I'm pretty unfamiliar with Safari I know it can do all of the same big-scale features firefox and opera can do, but of the three, which do you guy & gals.
Especially with the new OSX updates, which one is faster / all.
#SAFARI VS FIREFOX HIGH SIERRA REDDIT UPGRADE#
I know this space is a lot but once you did the upgrade to macOS High Sierra. 2011 MacBook Pro 8GB RAM 256GB SSD 27' Thunderbolt Display. There was a thread similar, including more browsers, but I have it narrowed to these 2.
Camino is what balances the line between Safari and Firefox for me.īTW wicker_man, Camino says it requires 50MB of disk and 10.2 or better with 128MB RAM, so it should work for your G3. Some web hosts have stricter systems which will limit your CPU and disk. Safari has the ultimate in Mac looks and integration. Safari loads content faster but a lot of websites don't load certain autocomplete or other features. I like the Mozilla team's work, and Camino will eventually resolve my issues (marked for 1.1) and also Firefox will eventually be more Mac-ish. For example: I am using my AirPod when streaming (HBO Max, Netflix, YouTube) and I receive a call on my iPhone, when I try to go back I have to reload the page, but with Firefox I just have to connect them on to top bar. If you’re wondering which web browser is the safest, speediest, or most customizable, there are. I don't need Camino to be able to subscribe and read feeds, just tell me they are there so I can click the button (as in Safari's blue RSS button in the address bar) and hand the feed of to my reader of choice (NNW) The app is packed with enough features and takes the advantages of cross-device functionality.
#SAFARI VS FIREFOX HIGH SIERRA REDDIT WINDOWS#
I know it's superficial, but the buttons and text widgits look like windows because of XUL which I can't stand.Ĭamino keeps the great Gecko rendering engine but it doesn't have plugins nor does it have inline spellcheck or the ability to handle RSS feeds. If you are tied in an Apple ecosystem, then go for Safari. Safari, pretty much because every available browser is really a skinned Safari. Also safari for the best battery saver browser for both macOS laptops and iOS devices. Personally Ive noticed it myself, usually eats up about 20-30 more than Safari, mostly from running the CPU significantly more. General consensus that Ive read points to Firefox using 'more battery' that Safari (CPU usage generally). If you want plugin nirvana, Firefox is the way to go, but I don't like it on Mac. Safari because of all the sync and seamless integration throughout all my Apple devices, including handover. Theres been discussion over the past year or so comparing the two. I switch back and forth from Camino to Safari.