Do any other alternative browsers handle 2FA differently or better? I really don’t know the answer, because I’m always using 1Password to retrieve/paste that info. And I like the little report it gives on every new tab.īrave for iPhone still - like every other browser for iOS - must use WebKit as its foundation. It’s been worth it for me although I’ve relatively recently switched, and still sort of testing it. Actually, now that I look, it seems I’m down to LastPass only. I like Brave’s built in functions, and the few extensions I use all work well. Opera was my backup browser for a while but it was relatively slow and had hangups of it’s own. Firefox ended up being the source of some really odd and inexplicable hiccups (e.g., file associations would get bungled up but only when Firefox was running - bizarre), not to mention their virtue-signaling drama, and Chrome, well, it runs fine but it’s Google and all. I try to use Safari every so often but the speed issues and the surprising number of problematic websites always leave me disappointed. Going to fool around with the Just Read extension and see if I can get it how I like it. Holy cow does it feel faster than Safari or Chrome. (That could be due to the ad-blockers I’ve used, I don’t know.) It comes bundled with a fair amount of commonly used files, and serves them locally whenever a site tries to fetch them from a delivery network.”Īlso, I’ve generally found that Chrome and Brave deliver pages to me a bit faster than Safari, and some sites/pages simply get hung in Safari and never fully load. The fact that these companies are now deeply woven into the fabric of the web, and that telling them off actually breaks a significant percentage of all websites, made me build this add-on. It lowers upkeep costs (as these services do not cost the host any money), and it speeds up the web in the sense that if you store a specific version of a file once, you will only contact that central content delivery service too see if the file you have is identical. There are a couple of reasons why web developers are tempted to do this. As the dev noted on a Reddit thread, “a lot of websites let you load vital files through large third-party services (like Google Hosted Libraries). One example: I use DecentralEyes, which is available for Firefox/Chromium-apps for enhanced privacy when sites you visit simply track you via the CDNs used when loading pages. Why? Because there are numerous free Chrome extensions that have done this for years.Ĭhrome has a much larger variety of ad-blockers, and when applied to Chrome (or Brave) you get as good or better blocking as with Safari. One more: a few weeks ago the $3.99 Mac app Tabs To Links made a bit of a splash in the Maciverse, but it left me confused that people would pay for a Mac app (because Safari APIs don’t yet permits it to exist as an extension) to turn a Safari page’s links into a list of links. As just one example, there used to be (only) 2 extensions that let you see EXIF data on web pages, but not only were they much clunkier than Exif Viewer but newer versions of Safari broke those extensions several months ago, they never got updated, and now there isn’t a single EXIF viewing extension that works in Safari. Safari is more locked down and the extension situation on Safari is fairly dire. As I mentioned earlier today, there are far more and far better extensions for Chrome/Brave than for Safari.
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