The lack of Google/Microsoft enshittification is a huge draw.
Linux
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Linux is a family of open source Unix-like operating systems based on the Linux kernel, an operating system kernel first released on September 17, 1991 by Linus Torvalds. Linux is typically packaged in a Linux distribution (or distro for short).
Distributions include the Linux kernel and supporting system software and libraries, many of which are provided by the GNU Project. Many Linux distributions use the word "Linux" in their name, but the Free Software Foundation uses the name GNU/Linux to emphasize the importance of GNU software, causing some controversy.
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Amen, fellow Lemming. It feels good to pull away from an enshittified corporate staple and adopt something that isn't trying to consume your soul.
userChrome.css, vertical tabs, better integration with the host system than Vivaldi or Edge, and support for fling scrolling that's not insanely fast on touchpads.
+1 for the Tree Style Tabs extension. There's nothung quite like it on any other browser (thougb I heard vivaldi does something similar? I'll try that, but it's still chr*mium, so not for me)
I really tried to switch to FF, but I need my vertical tabs, side-by-side/sidebar view and power user keyboard shortcuts.
I tried to use Tree Style Tabs, but that uses FF's sidebar view and I need the sidebar for other things too. There's a use case where I like to have two tabs open side by side, and the best way I found to do it in FF is the extension "Open in sidebar". But that overwrites the tree style tabs view, so I can either use vertical tabs or display websites in the sidebar, but not both at the same time! Not to mention that when I drag a tab out from a window, the website opened in the sidebar is carried over to the new window with it, which is infuriating! Also, Tree Style Tabs is so damn wide.
Another pet peeve is that searching in open tabs is not trivial. When you want to search in the titles of your open tabs with the goal of switching to it, you need to:
- Focus the address bar (e.g. Ctrl+L)
- Type % (Shift+5, Space)
- Write the name of the open tab and press Arrow Down and Enter to switch to it
Which is just too many steps for this use case to be efficient, and I do this a lot in other browsers!
Despite all the privacy problems and other issues, Edge:
- supports vertical tabs natively, with an option to only display a thin panel with only the tab favicons and display a wider view with the tab titles on hover
- has a sidebar view on the right that I can use to display my utility tab, and it can be used with vertical tabs active; or I can open two tabs side by side in one browser window
- when I drag a tab out or open a new browser window, the sidebar view is closed in the new window by default, which is what I want
- searching in open tabs and switching to them is as easy as a single hotkey to bring up the search, type name, press Enter
I like the idea of switching to FF and ditching Chromium very much, but these things are deal breakers for me and they're why I have to stay with Edge for now...
That's fair. Some Firefox forks, like Pulse and Floorp, have native vertical tabs, but I don't know about your other issues, and forks have their own potential problems.