![]() ![]() I often surf with JS turned off because cranky, but apart from JS, it's worth remembering that Clean Markup Leads to Happy Paths. Firefox at that time just chopped off the recursion at, iirc, 500 levels, but WebKit kept going, attempting to render the page as written. Installed and pinned website shortcuts in the Mac Dock. Otherwise, it will open the website wrapped in its own window. Chrome only has static buttons that stay there, meanwhile Edge has a tab switcher and video scrubber like Safari. It's really good Plus, for Touch Bar MacBooks, Edge makes MUCH better use of it than Chrome. One of the differences I recall between the Safari of around 2011 and the Firefox of then: if certain HTML tags weren't closed, WebKit would gamely keep adding the next tag as a child of the previous one (which is technically correct), which meant a large badly-formed page could cause it to choke. If the website has a PWA app (like Twitter), the shortcut will open the PWA app. It's quick, snappy, supports all Chrome extensions, it uses less RAM, it's got Picture-in-Picture. So I use it for Jira and Confluence, and it actually is a fairly nice browser. However, my current employer uses MS stuff, and so I've set Edge up for those specific things. However, Edge forked off Chromium (for their newer builds starting with, iirc, Anaheim), Chromium's Blink forked off WebKit, (which forked off KHTML), so…. First, I used to be on the Safari/WebKit team, so obviously biased given how many of the team I know. ![]()
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