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Opinion

The search for the perfect browser

Philipp Rüegg
6/4/2022
Translation: Veronica Bielawski

Chrome has no mobile ad-blocker, Brave is annoying with its crypto ads, Firefox offers too few configuration options, and Vivaldi doesn’t support touchpad gestures. There’s no such thing as the perfect browser.

Things were simpler in the ol’ days. For the unsophisticated user, there was Internet Explorer. Back then, I surfed on Netscape. It was faster and cooler. Our friendship lasted throughout my teenage years. Until, after the turn of the millennium, a certain fiery fox entered the field. I’m talking about Firefox, of course. The name and logo called to young, hip adults like me. And Firefox was fast. Netscape could no longer keep up.

Ads? No, thank you

The missing ad blocker in the mobile version was the final straw. Other browsers, like Firefox, had already been offering said function for ages. But because I was so hard on the Google train due to my Google smartphone, I remained loyal to Chrome for a while longer. As my smartphone use increased, the balance finally tipped. After over ten years, I kicked Chrome out the door. Its successor: Brave.

Privacy yay, crypto nay

It wasn’t long before I found my next great love.

A DIY browser

Edge? No, thank you

Brave it is

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As a child, I wasn't allowed to have any consoles. It was only with the arrival of the family's 486 PC that the magical world of gaming opened up to me. Today, I'm overcompensating accordingly. Only a lack of time and money prevents me from trying out every game there is and decorating my shelf with rare retro consoles. 


Opinion

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