Posted on 04/21/2009 2:43:07 PM PDT by martin_fierro
6 Reasons Why Firefox Dude May Want to Switch to Chrome
Apr. 21st, 2009 By David Pierce
I did it. About a week ago, I took the plunge. I made Google Chrome my default browser, and now do almost everything within Chrome. I do miss Firefox every once in a while (after all, we were in a relationship for quite a while, and over a number of version changes), but Im glad Ive moved on.
Chrome is only getting better rolling out more features, making existing features work even better, and generally getting faster and awesome-er.
Here are the six reasons that ultimately lead me to checking that make Chrome my default browser button:
(1) One Tab, One Process
My biggest issue with Firefox was always that its a memory hog. Leave it open overnight, and suddenly its taking up 400MB of RAM. Thats a lot of RAM. The only solution would be to close Firefox, and restart it either losing all my tabs, or waiting approximately 19.5 hours for them all to open again.
Chromes better each individual tab runs as its own process in Windows Explorer. Theres a task manager within Chrome that lets you see which, if any, tabs are using tons of memory, and close just that one. Similarly, if a tab crashes, youll be able to just close that one tab, rather than having to close Firefox entirely. With Chrome, browsers dont crash: pages do. Thats a huge plus.
(2) One Box, Many Searches
With the address bar in Chrome, you can do a ridiculous number of things: search your history, do site-specific search (by typing a domain and then Tab), search Google, or get suggestions based on your browsing history. To search just about anything within Chrome, type Control+L and then whatever youre looking for. Chromell find it.
(3) Better Downloader
Firefoxs native download manager is awful its a new window, doesnt make finding documents easy, and does a bad job of showing you whats downloading without lots of hunting. In Chrome, when you start a download, it just starts. Theres a status bar at the bottom of the page, and you can easily click to open the file, or right-click to do a number of other things with it. Though there are Firefox extensions to mirror the functionality Chrome has, Id rather have it native plus, Chromes is better anyway.
(4) The New Tab Page
Every time you open a new Tab in Chrome, youre presented with a page full of possibilities. Theres a list of recently-closed tabs, in case you closed one by accident. Theres a box to search your history, in case you forgot the site you want to get back to. Theres a list of recent bookmarks, for some reason that I never really figured out. And, best of all, theres a list of sites you visit most easy access to your top 9 sites is pretty great not to mention sad that addictinggames.com makes my list.
But thats beside the point. Theres a ton you can do quickly and easily, right from the second you open a new tab in Chrome. Again, there are Firefox extensions that do some of these things, and the new build of Firefox promises a similar new tab page, but Ill stick with Chrome.
(5) Application Shortcuts
Ultimately, this was the feature that sold me on Chrome: the ability to turn single sites into standalone applications. Now Gmail, Google Calendar, and Remember the Milk each have their own application that can be launched from the desktop, lives in its own window without a nav-bar, and looks and feels just like a desktop app. Click on a link, and youre taken to a new tab in Chrome, so your page always stays open. That, plus Chromes great use of Google Gears, means your calendar, email, tasks and more can be available online and off as desktop apps.
(6) Tab Around
This ones not as big a deal as the others, but I think its pretty fantastic: Tabs are incredibly easy to manipulate in Chrome. You can pull a tab out to make it its own window, or pull one back in to consolidate your browsing. You can even I just discovered this drag a Firefox tab into Chrome and itll load right there! If youre reading this in Firefox, try it. Ill wait.
Awesome, right? All over Chrome, tabs are easy to move around, open and close, and they live at the top of the page which makes them even easier to find and use.
To put it simply, Chrome is faster and smarter than Firefox. I liked Firefox a lot, but Chrome seems to get how I intuitively want to use a browser. I cant switch permanently until Chrome has extensions, or at least functional Greasemonkey support; for my regular browsing, though, Chromes the clear winner.
LOL
>>(1) One Tab, One Process <<
That’s the only one that’s compelling to me.
But I use 35 plugins that would need to be duplicated to change from Firefox.
I hate websites that are too clever by half.
You’re scary sometimes. [evil grin]
Ain’t that the truth.
Thanks for the suggestion.
I installed Chrome several weeks ago but had not really checked it out. Your post prompted me to take a closer look.
The speed of loading and accessing pages is tremendous in comparison to Firefox — particularly, when using Avast. After installing Avast about a year ago, loading pages in Firefox became a problem. Chrome doesn’t seem to have that problem.
There are a few Firefox extensions that I miss, but Chrome’s speed in comparison to Firefox is a big plus.
I can definitely see making Chrome my default browser at some point.
After I left this thread last night, I spent some more time with Chrome. I imported all my bookmarks and started dragging them around in Chrome. But for the X-marks, I might keep Chrome as default on my main machine. I pulled several of my main bookmark folders, or categories, onto the bookmark toolbar, each with dozens of bookmarks in them. It’s much faster navigation this way. Very cool.
Yep.
I've been using Chrome all morning. The more I use it the more I like it. The speed is fantastic in comparison to other browsers. It's simple, but very functional. I may make it my default as well.
In recent months, Firefox has been crashing on me at least once a day. I'm going to give Chrome a try all day. If no crashes, it's probably going to be my default.
I am having the same problem. I am running suse 11, on an older laptop. I chalked it up as a memory shortage on the computer but I don't know. Firefox on windows is nice but I am so used to MSIE there was a bit of a learning curve so on the Windows machine I'll stick with MSIE, but on Linux I'll try anything stable.
I have 8 tabs open in FireFox 3.0.9 and I am using 336mb memory, big deal I have GB’s to spare.
Google is the enemy and won’t find a place on my PC.
That was suppose to read 58 tabs.......
I have 58 tabs open in FireFox 3.0.9 and I am using 336mb memory, big deal I have GBs to spare.
Google is the enemy and wont find a place on my PC.
Ugh ... I hate Safari ... and I'm a Mac user. Firefox is my browser of choice on Mac and PC.
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