Need a table of browser features or a hint for an alternate browser
I want to slim down the Slackware system on my laptop and am wondering if I should go for a different browser than Firefox. There seem to be some lean and fast browsers, but sadly I can't find complete lists of their features on the web. While Wikipedia has some tables about browser features they are very generic and don't tell me what I want to know.
Can anyone point me to a site with complete lists of browser features? May be anyone can tell me if their favorite browser (except Firefox) supports this features, which are essential to me: - Tabbed browsing - Flash, mplayer-plugin and AddBlock Plus - Import of Firefox bookmarks, and if possible bookmark syncing over the net - Keyword searches As far I have seen til now only Seamonkey supports those features, but Seamonkey comes also with a mail client and a web-editor. I don't have the need for a web-editor at all and a mail client is only for me if it can import my mail accounts and filter rules from Thunderbird. Thanks in advance for any hint. |
SeaMonkey, IceWeasel, SongBird[list goes on] are Firefox(Mozilla) based. Well maybe try Opera? It passes 4 thing test you mentioned.
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Anyway you can still have Firefox and one more browser on system. |
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Hi Tobi,
Here is the link that might help: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_web_browsers The above link contains features/comparison of all web browsers. Another link is: http://alternativebrowseralliance.com/browsers.html but I think the one mentioned in Wiki is better. As you mentioned you already had a look at the Wiki link not sure if the one I have mentioned is the same. I personally prefer using Firefox and the next comes in my mind is Chrome. Chrome is pretty light weight and works fine on my Ubuntu system. |
My 2 cents.
Midori WebKit based browser like chrome, chromium Tabbed browsing - yes Flash - yes mplayer-plugin - not that I know about AddBlock Plus - has it's own Import of Firefox bookmarks - yes bookmark syncing over the net - don't think so Popup blocker user agent switcher Renders CSS and htlm5 video well, familiar browser interface, not perfect. (Either is Firefox 5) Has some nice features like buttons in the status bar to turn images, script, plugins on/off. |
Thanks for the answers anyone.
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Any informations about keyword search in any other browsers than the Mozilla based ones? If not, it seems to me that I am stuck with Mozilla based browsers. In that case I would think that Seamonkey would be my best option, if I can find out how to import my Thunderbird stuff into its mail client. |
Hello,
I use Xmarks http://www.xmarks.com/ to synchronize my bookmarks which is available for several browsers. But I had no good experiences with Xmarks when Firefox 4 came, it damaged my bookmarks which I use to synchronize over several computers. I have a question: what is your problem with Firefox? I was also considering to change the browser, but I did not find anything better than Firefox. [off topic] My biggest problem with Firefox is on Windows-computers where the first start of Firefox on a new useraccount produces more than 20MB of data which (depending on the profile-type of the user) are then copied over the network everytime the user logs in, But this is no typical Linux-problem ;) [/off topic] I tried midori, it took about 45 minutes to compile webkit (which is one of the dependencies) but I found this browser quite useless. I uninstalled it after one day. Markus |
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Midori does use gtk. Most are going to use gtk or qt.
If you want another light browser built upon webkit look at XXXterm. I built it on a FreeBSD box and it worked ok. Configures with a few config files. It has vi key bindings, very light, takes a little getting used to. Quote:
Firefox is a geko based browser, kinda heavy. Same as galeon. Firefox 5 speeds up the script engine a little. I've got Midori .3 open with 5 tabs right now, top says it's using 53M of memory. It renders pages correctly. So does XXXterm. If you want a full figured browser, your choices are Firefox, Chromium, Opera. If you want a lighter one you are going to loose features. You can go all the way down to lynx if you want. Then there is dillo, works fine, doesn't do frames though. Quote:
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arora is QT, and according to the comparison page from wikipedia, mentioned above, :
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_web_browsers it has got quite a lot of features. What i can't figure out if the ones you mention/need are amongst it. What i did is this: http://www.hermann-uwe.de/blog/confi...sable-bearable I can't say that iceweasel/firefox seems to be slower or more resource-hungry than other gui-browsers for me. I have read that for some people it is. |
Thanks to all for your advices.
I managed to replace Firefox and Thunderbird with Seamonkey and its mail client without loosing functionality. I compared them, and found that Firefox+Thunderbird are using 60 MB of RAM more than Seamonkey with mail client open, both with the same tabs openm so if no problems arise I will stay with Seamonkey (currently writing here from it. |
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- Tabbed browsing - Flash, mplayer-plugin and AddBlock Plus - Import of Firefox bookmarks, and if possible bookmark syncing over the net - Keyword searches Yes it does all of these, including keyword searches. Though instead of AddBlock Plus use 'Opera AdBlock' from the Opera Extensions page. |
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@ruario: Sorry, I misunderstood your post.
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Ok, I tried Opera, and it really is fast and lightweight. It has some issues with updating the screen while scrolling a website on my system, but nothing to annoying. But since I already ditched Firefox and Thunderbird in favor of Seamonkey I think I will stick with Seamonkey.
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