The echosystem browser: Edge for Windows and Chrome for Android.
Arc Browser has been discontinued.Slightly off topic: has anyone used Arc? what are your thoughts on it? Their stupid installer doesn't work for me.
I always saw this coming, but not that fast.Arc Browser has been discontinued.
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Arc Browser has been discontinued, but the company's building a new browser: Dia - gHacks Tech News
In 2022, Arc Browser was termed as the "Chrome replacement" that people wanted. Three years later, The Browser Company has discontinued the app, all because it wants to build a new browser, […]www.ghacks.net
fwiw I have MV2 ubo extension in current version Ungoogled Chromium. minor learning curve for the install.Firefox because of MV2 support, and I can still customize the UI, e.g., the menu still shows up.
Librewolfe?Still using The Wolf 90% of the time & if necessary Edge![]()
Good point, and Vivaldi is very lightweight and allows you to watch videos on YouTube while blocking ads. It works very well for watching videos.Vivaldi (just add adguard filter list to get adblocking similar to Brave) and enjoy extenion-less browsing experience without insinuated crypto and vpn services or excessive disk writes.
One more advantage; it lets you to install it in one folder outside SSD; do not have to create a linke for cache folder outside SSD as in the case of Edge or Chrome.Good point, and Vivaldi is very lightweight and allows you to watch videos on YouTube while blocking ads. It works very well for watching videos.![]()
It seems to me that it also installs in the user's space, doesn't it? Without requiring administrative privileges to install for all users, does this confirm that it still works? Like Tor?One more advantage; it lets you to install it in one folder outside SSD; do not have to create a linke for cache folder outside SSD as in the case of Edge or Chrome.
During install, you get three options: install for current user, install for all users, and install as standalone.It seems to me that it also installs in the user's space, doesn't it? Without requiring administrative privileges to install for all users, does this confirm that it still works? Like Tor?
We have to hope that Chrome isn't sold, otherwise it could spell the end for Firefox, which cannot happen, and it could also harm Vivaldi and other Chromium-based browsers. Google may have its flaws, but it also has its merits. If Chrome were sold to God knows who, it could turn out badly, so it's better to leave it as it is. An example of this is Project Zero.Firefox (primary) & Vivaldi.