I personally prefer Firefox. On my ASUS VX7 A1, it loads obviously faster, seems to have better protection, and downloads things quicker. I have never had any major problems out of Firefox.
On my XP, I have Internet Explorer and it seems to crash frequently and goes consistently slower.
^ I thought that you might like Firefox more, but it was just a lucky guess.
Eh, my name had really nothing to do with "Mozilla". It was just a coincidence, but it's pretty obvious which one is better if you've used both of them.
If I were any of you, I would just go with Google Chrome.
I just don't like Chrome for some reason. It has a lot of cool features though, but seems slow on my ASUS... Thus, I still stick to Firefox.
If I were any of you, I would just go with Google Chrome.
Firefox: Great speed, great security, able to customize many things and control every aspect of your web browser, many extensions. Chrome: Great speed, good security, lack of customization, not a lot of extensions.
So if you don't care for customization or having several extensions then use Google Chrome.
+ Firefox attracts by extensibility of addons, causing stormy orgasms in users, whose childhood was spent without constructors 'Lego' (but a passion for handmade was left). As a result of thoughtless adding of addons may resemble a hybrid of top model food processor and a family minivan, despite the fact that many add-ons are often been used only once per day. Firefox is the only browser that fully supports MathML. + The truth of the dignity of Fox is its omnivorous. While the rest of the upstream developer were working on design, and others on speed, mozilla-team worked on interoperability with all standards, which they found the internets, RFC, and so on. Therefore, if the site does not open at Fox, he will not open anywhere else. - Without addons Firefox is dull. - FireFox until the fourth version was much slower than Chrome, and, suddenly, the last IE (sometimes). - Firefox is still very gluttonous in terms of memory.
IE is the only web browser, that supports ActiveX, which allows you to make it emulate any features in other browsers. We all know there are a lot of bugs in IE. The most famous of them: - Double margin - Slightly less than the complete lack of understanding of all parameters display (fixed in IE 8) - Failure in understanding min-height (fixed in IE 7) - and others
Here are the main innovations in IE9: + 100% support for SVG 1.1, DOM, CSS3 and other web-standards; + GPU-acceleration hardware of all kinds of graphics; + JavaScript-engine, which uses multi-core processor.
Despite its dull, buggy unbalanced nature IE remains one of the most popular browser in the world.