![]() ![]() ![]() I still use Safari for some personal surfing, but I need Chrome-like browsing for work because Chrome-based browsers are the only ones that can run multiple user accounts at the same time. I've used Chromium, but it has problem off and on, so now I'm using Brave, which is built on Chromium, but more stable, and comes with built-in privacy protections, built-in Tor (if you want to go really, really private), runs all Chrome extensions, and includes a way to "tip" to support favorite sites. I'm moving off of Chrome proper because of Google's lack of privacy. Banging your drums and saying that "Safari does not have your best interests in mind" doesn't really change that.Ĭhrome-ish for me. For others, though, a browser like Safari can be an entirely valid choice - and that includes for reasons like privacy and trust. If nothing is ever good enough, in your opinion, unless it's open source, then Firefox is the way to go (and probably a switch to something like Linux as well). Sure, that's "only" the underlying browser engine. But for the end-users, it would certainly suck to have a bunch of devices that would no longer support video playback.Ībsolutely none of that is possible with Safari because, and I repeat, Safari does not have your best interests in mind. Plus there was the whole deal about it being unclear whether WebM (including VP8/VP9) is patent-free or not. Apple obviously chose to back H.264/H.265 instead.
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