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Distribution: Slackware64-current with "True Multilib" and KDE4Town.
Posts: 9,095
Rep:
Chromium. What is the appeal?
First, we all owe a great deal of gratitude to Alien Bob for all he has done for Slackware, so this is not, in anyway, directed at him or his build of Chromium.
That aside, my question is what is the appeal? In a relatively short period of time it has become the most popular browser,
I've tested Firefox, Opera and Chromium and Chromium is the slowest every time.
Then there is google's reputation for being, shall we say, "less than honest," about their intentions. I wouldn't trust them any further than I could pick up their headquarters building and throw it and this news story makes one, at least me, trust them even less,
I also have tried it, and I went back to Firefox in a day. I don't know what the appeal is. I don't even trust it in terms of privacy. Also see a fork of Chromium: https://www.srware.net/en/software_srware_iron.php
Another problem I had with Chrome / Chromium is that it uses huge amounts of RAM to the point of getting killed by the OOM killer.
I don't think that how popular something is has anything to do with how good or useful it is. I mean take smartphones and tablets as an example.
I use mostly Firefox. I like it. That said, I also use on occasion, Opera, Seamonkey, and Chromium. Sometimes, Firefox just chokes on something and won't render worth a daggone. So I open the others until I get what I need. Some banking sites won't work for me for example.
Being a KDE user, I really just don't use Konqueror. Can't even answer why.
When I have used Windows, chrome always seems faster. I think that is the main reason why people use it. Most people who have a limited knowledge of computer systems seem to either use internet explorer or chrome in Windows, and I can say that at one point when chrome first started catching on I switched because it was notably faster than Firefox on Windows.
With that said I think Firefox has caught up now, but a lot of people jumped ship during a time when chrome may have just been a faster browser. Most people don't distro hop or browser hop, I think the average user just wants a good browsing experience consistently. Along with its speed it has flash built in and a portable version.
For me it comes down to features and a familiar interface. I have been using an alternate browser since Netscape so I have followed the project for a long time and feel linked to it in a sense because of this. Not to mention that Mozilla is truly an open-source developer. Whereas Google has many commercial interests that they might want to use there software to influence people with. I came back to Firefox for this reason and also because I always missed the search engines bar that chrome extensions and plugins could never seem to get right!
I think it comes down to this; If you love true open-source software support it! And share your knowledge and experiences with people. Google is a corporation and chrome tries to run process's in the background even when the browsers closed. I look at chrome as a Firefox copy (as far as interface) with a sleek interface for marketing purposes with flash built in.
Trying to convince people to leave Chrome, would be like trying to get end-users to leave Windows, it just ain't gonna happen. Not in the next 10 years anyway. But with that said its always nice to have another option.
I also tried Chrome some time ago and within an hour I had deleted it off my system. Slow and RAM eater.
I love Konqueror but it just doesn't render quite as good as it should/could, so I use Seamonkey and Opera regularly and if I get to feeling a little paranoid I use Icecat.
I took a look at it once because I felt that, as a conscientious geek, I ought to. Ho-hum. Opera has been my browser of choice almost since it was introduced.
I am also wary that, when it comes to "Don't be evil," Google has a blind-spot for Google.
I used Chrome on windows and found it would add 3-4 processes in the task manager.
Also it would consume more memory than Firefox. So I switched back to firefox.
Don't know about chrome but firefox is definitely fast.
Quote:
Most people who have a limited knowledge of computer systems seem to either use internet explorer or chrome in Windows
I installed chromium to try it out. I thought it had a bare-bones feel to it, and an unfinished appearance. I wasn't impressed. I decided to stick with Firefox as my primary browser. I'll still fire up Chromium occasionally when I run into a site that just won't work right with Firefox.
Even though I prefer Firefox over any other browser I've tried, I wish it were not such a RAM and CPU resource pig. I'd love to find a browser that offers good functionality similar to Firefox, but is lighter on resources.
that is about the ONLY thing i use it for
that and if i am out and about on a windows machine someplace i can log in and have all my bookmarks
I didn't know you could run apps in Chromium (I'm strictly a Firefox user), so I went to the Google App store and apparently you need to login to Google to download it. Is that standard for everything in the Google App store?
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