I’ve been a loyal Firefox user since it first came out, but Chrome has beaten it. The biggest reason why I switched was because of speed. Firefox takes up entirely too much RAM. From version 4 to the latest version 6, FF has been sluggish. Now, of course, I could just purchase more RAM and speed things up, but I’m limited on my laptop and therefore the switch to Chrome.
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Chrome has most of the features and web developer tools I used with Firefox. The one thing I miss about Firefox is the multi-text select function. I loved being able to select and copy only the parts of content I needed and not have to remove the parts I didn’t want. Oh well, maybe Chrome will add that feature in the future or maybe there’s an extension.
The one thing I love about Chrome since it’s first release was that each tab was its own program (so to speak). So, if one web page crashed due to a Flash plugin or some other JavaScript error, or if it was too slow, it wouldn’t slow down the entire browsing experience and I could kindly close the problematic tab without it crashing my entire browser.
I’ll still use Firefox for testing of course — it still is the second most popular browser — but I think Chrome will be my primary browser for surfing the net on my laptop.