It's becoming obvious that Chrome will beat Firefox and become #2


Do you think Chrome/Chromium will become the #2 browser, making Firefox #3?   

286 members have voted

  1. 1. Do you think Chrome/Chromium will become the #2 browser, making Firefox #3?

    • Yes, I think Chrome will beat Firefox. Firefox will someday be used less than Chrome.
      170
    • No, I think Chrome will never beat Firefox. Firefox will always be used more than Chrome.
      116


Recommended Posts

This is just my opinion, but I do believe that Chrome's user base is climbing at a much faster rate than Firefox when it debuted years ago.

I think it's obvious that Chrome will beat Firefox's marketshare fairly soon despite its lack of the robust features that Firefox has because:

1) Chrome's interface is still way more responsive than even the latest Firefox 4 Beta 9. Firefox has a major disadvantage in they refuse to rewrite the UI from the ground up, while Chrome is the fastest starting browser for Windows by far.

2) People LIKE Chrome's minimalistic interface because there's more on the page to see, while Firefox still can't get rid of that big orange button.

3) People have a blind, unwavering, almost religious faith in anything Google does, simply because it is the only company that gives out the most web-based products for free. (so they can get your info into the cloud) Google is already at the core of what most people on the web do, so they will begin to move towards Chrome no matter what.

4) Google quickly added extensions, and that's all that was needed to start turning the tide away from Firefox.

5) People notice the added speed from Webkit, since it doesn't take a genius to see that Gecko renders more slowly. (simply because it is wayyyyyyy more complex code than Webkit)

6) People seem to like having a browser that "just works" and you never even see the updates applied in the background. Overall, Chrome is a much more streamlined experience for the average user than Firefox is.

Add more reasons if you can think of them, and if you disagree, tell me why.

Firefox has decent extensions. Chrome doesn't. Chrome has almost 0 customization and is extremely basic.

NOPE

That's exactly WHY it will beat Firefox. Most people want something that "just works".

  • Like 5

That's exactly WHY it will beat Firefox. Most people want something that "just works".

What a ridiculous comment. Firefox works just fine, you don't have to install addons but it's nice to have the option unlike with Chrome where you're stuck with what you get (which is very little).

I'll never use Chrome as long and the TAB behavior in the address bar works like it does. I'm not really interested in saving a few milliseconds when browsing, so speed isn't that big of an issue for me. Firefox isn't that much slower. I will admit, the UI in Firefox (reading opening tabs, etc.), isn't as smooth as I'd like.

Firefox will always stay on top because it is simply a better browser. I like chrome but I prefer Firefox.

I used to love Firefox as well but even Opera 11 is a better browser than the stable version of Firefox.

I use Firefox 3.6 but I could see chrome overtaking Firefox. I like chrome from the brief times I tried it on others computers but I would never use it on my computer because I don't trust Google enough to use it as my browser I will wear my tinfoil hat :shiftyninja:. The only problem I have right now is I don't know what I am going to do when Firefox 4 comes out because I hate it. I have tried to use the betas four or five times but always come back to 3.6 for multiple reasons.

7) When most people see Firefox 4 Beta for the first time, they immediately say on web forums, blog comments, etc : "Oh look, they copied Chrome"

People thus start to get the idea that Chrome is more innovative, and once they try Chrome, they get hooked on the speed advantage over Firefox.

You are all wrong...Opera will win :p lol

FF 4 > Chrome > FF 3.6

Firefox 4 is an improvement to FF 3.6 by a lot. It's still not as fast as Chrome, but the look and feel is much better in my opinion.

At work I have Opera 11.01 as primary browser, then on my second monitor I have FF4 pre-beta 10. It use to be Chrome.

The only add-on that I had was for Canadian spelling and spell bound (For text-fields).

You are all wrong...Opera will win :p lol

FF 4 > Chrome > FF 3.6

Firefox 4 is an improvement to FF 3.6 by a lot. It's still not as fast as Chrome, but the look and feel is much better in my opinion.

At work I have Opera 11.01 as primary browser, then on my second monitor I have FF4 pre-beta 10. It use to be Chrome.

The only add-on that I had was for Canadian spelling and spell bound (For text-fields).

Personally I think Opera is the best browser for people to go to if they think Firefox is too slow or Chrome is too untrustworthy.

If only more people used it... :pinch:

Yes, because the average public don't give a flying fig about extensions, user javascript, tab behaviour. They want something simple to use, and fast. The problem is that all of you are thinking like nerds when you should be thinking like the average web using layman. Chrome is by far the easiest web browser to use, and it pretty much ties with Opera at being the fastest. Firefox not only seems to be getting more buggy with each release, they actually seem to be going back with their rendering engine as well, a lot of work is needed on Firefox. I am a tech geek, and I don't even care about extensions. I use ad muncher to get rid of advertising, and the only addons I use in Chromium are ESPN cricinfo, Chrome 2 Phone, Awesome Screenshot, and F.B Purity. I use my web browser to browse, I don't need it to do a million things in one go. Chrome may not be as customisable as some other browsers, but it is slick, extremely fast, and easy to use, and that is why it is turning into such a hit.

5) People notice the added speed from Webkit, since it doesn't take a genius to see that Gecko renders more slowly. (simply because it is wayyyyyyy more complex code than Webkit)

Complexity has nothing to do with performance.

Personally I think Opera is the best browser for people to go to if they think Firefox is too slow or Chrome is too untrustworthy.

If only more people used it... :pinch:

Opera is becoming my primary browsing browser primarily for its browsing speed and ability to stack tabs, however there are still a few extensions i miss from chrome such as the autopager, built in rss feed and gmail checker. The only reason I use firefox is for its greasemonkey script support.

Opera is becoming my primary browsing browser primarily for its browsing speed and ability to stack tabs, however there are still a few extensions i miss from chrome such as the autopager, built in rss feed and gmail checker. The only reason I use firefox is for its greasemonkey script support.

Well I know that Opera has a gmail checking extension already, and I'm sure that those other extensions will come in time. Also, many of the popular scripts already are compatible with Opera as it has built-in script support like Chrome does.

To be honest, I'd love if Opera became #3, and Firefox went to #4, because Opera has so much more work ahead of it, yet it still renders just as fast as Chrome and has a more responsive UI and rendering speed than Firefox.

There are many many things which Chrome simple fails at, including but not limited to,

Even with the newer API, there is no proper content blocking in Chrome; Some things will still be loaded. SRWare Iron type adblocking on the other hand suffers from false positives.

No Script wannabes are much more limited and require a more PITA setup in Chrome than in Firefox.

Chrome tried fitting the page on one piece of paper and adding a scrollbar in the printed version, while Firefox actually printed the page out properly.

The download manager is worthless for professional use.

Understanding what tab has what open is impossible after a certain amount of tabs. Whereas Firefox has an easily scrollable tab bar.

The new tab page lack customization, does not address privacy concerns.

Otherwise, Mozilla needs to feel the burn a bit more IMO, but from *good* browsers which deliver a good mix of features and performance such as IE9 and Opera, not Chrome.

When you have a modern computer, speed isn't that much of a concern.

I have a fairly new laptop with a higher end Core 2 Duo processor and 4GB of RAM and Chrome boots up instantly, while Firefox takes 2-3 seconds to boot.

Modern hardware won't blur the line between bloated software and streamlined software.

I like Chrome over Firefox, but I would rather use Opera than either of them.

That being said, I think Chrome will eventually "beat" Firefox, if both continue on their current paths, but it doesn't matter much to me cause neither one of them compares to Opera for my usage (and neither one of them will unless they dramatically overhaul their browsers).

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • OpenAI's new GPT-5.5-Cyber tops Claude Mythos 5 in vulnerability benchmark by Pradeep Viswanathan OpenAI today announced a major expansion of Daybreak, a cybersecurity initiative designed to help defenders find, validate, and fix software vulnerabilities earlier in the development process. The availability of powerful AI models has definitely changed the cybersecurity landscape by making vulnerability discovery much faster. However, the bigger bottleneck for the industry is now patching those vulnerabilities. Impacted software teams need to validate the discovered issues, understand their impact, develop fixes, test them, and deploy patches. Back in March, OpenAI launched a preview of Codex Security, which uses agentic reasoning with automated validation to discover high-impact issues and actionable fixes specific to the codebase. Since then, it has scanned more than 30 million commits across over 30,000 codebases; more than 70,000 findings were marked as fixed by human reviewers, while over 500,000 findings were automatically determined to be fixed. Now, OpenAI is releasing an updated Codex Security plugin that can run deep scans, review recent code changes, generate security reports, trace attack paths, validate findings, and create codebase-specific patches for human review. It can also triage findings from existing scanners, advisories, bug bounty reports, and ticketing systems. OpenAI says the plugin can export results to vulnerability management systems and integrate with workflows using SARIF files, CodeQL queries, the Codex CLI, and the Codex app. Back in May, OpenAI announced the preview of GPT-5.5-Cyber, a new model built on top of the recently released GPT-5.5, designed for specialized cybersecurity work. Today, OpenAI launched the full version of GPT-5.5-Cyber through a limited release for verified defenders. On CyberGym, GPT-5.5-Cyber scored 85.6%, compared with 81.8% for GPT-5.5 and 83.8% for Claude Mythos 5. It also scored 39.5% on ExploitGym, compared with 25.95% for GPT-5.5, and 69.8% on SEC-bench Pro, compared with 63.1%. OpenAI also announced the new Daybreak Cyber Partner Program, which will allow security vendors and service providers to use GPT-5.5 with Trusted Access for Cyber in their products and services. Accenture, Akamai, Cisco, Cloudflare, CrowdStrike, IBM, Palo Alto Networks, Proofpoint, SentinelOne, Wiz, Zscaler, and others were listed as initial partners for this program. OpenAI is also launching Patch the Planet with Trail of Bits, HackerOne, Calif, researchers, and maintainers. More than 30 open-source projects have committed to participate, including cURL, Go, Python, Sigstore, and pyca/cryptography.
    • AMD confirms 26.6.2 FSR driver breaks on many Windows PCs by Sayan Sen Earlier today AMD released a major graphics driver update as it brings support for FSR 4.1 to Radeon RX 7000 series GPUs. The new update, version 26.6.2, also brings support for Assassin's Creed Black Flag Resynced and more. And while the driver technically supports Windows 10 version 21H2 and newer, the tech giant has confirmed that there is a major issue with the new driver on non-Windows 11 PCs as it fails to launch properly on such systems. The error message says, "The version of AMD Software that you have launched is not compatible with your currently installed AMD graphics driver." Therefore on the surface it looks like a compatibility problem. AMD has also confirmed that the device manager will display the yellow bang or yellow exclamation sign alongside your GPU under the Display adapters dropdown. Here is what the Radeon team's official advisory recommends to affected users: "Users Running Windows 10 and AMD Software: Adrenalin Edition 26.6.2 May Encounter Yellow Bang in Device Manager Affecting AMD Radeon RX Series Graphics ... Our Engineers are currently investigating this issue and will provide a fix once it is available. Affected users may revert to AMD Software: Adrenalin Edition 26.6.1 as a temporary workaround." As such you should revert back to the previous 26.6.1 driver which was released earlier this month. In case you were looking to play Assassin's Creed Black Flag Resynced and DOOM: The Dark Ages | Revelations you will probably have to wait a while if you want the driver to support those games officially. You can find the support article here on Microsoft's website.
    • https://uupdump.net/selectlang...7829-4524-978d-7b5fe79263e3
    • A McDonald's restaurant uses about 1.5 to 2 million gallons of water per year for operations like food preparation, cleaning, and restrooms. That is a lot less than the 2,083 gallons of water per megawatt hour mentioned above.
    • Turbo Pascal Original authorAnders Hejlsberg (at Borland) DeveloperBorland Release20 November 1983; 42 years ago[1][2] Operating systemCP/M, CP/M-86, MS-DOS, Windows 3.x, Classic Mac OS PlatformZ80, x86, 68000, PC-98 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turbo_Pascal It was the one language I actually learned to program in.   I wasn't very good at it and never used it at work.    If anyone has any personal Turbo Pascal stories or personal accomplishments using it, please take a moment to share.   Thanks. Peace
  • Recent Achievements

    • Week One Done
      Almohandis earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Rookie
      dorf went up a rank
      Rookie
    • First Post
      mike_rumble earned a badge
      First Post
    • Dedicated
      tuben earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • Week One Done
      mnsgroup earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      505
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      208
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      100
    4. 4
      Michael Scrip
      88
    5. 5
      neufuse
      71
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!