So, yes, Opera and Opera GX are different browsers built by the same game to target different crowds. It got features such as Network, CPU, GPU limiter that is a must-have for some enthusiasts, and for some it is overkill. Opera GX, according to the company is a more advanced or special version of the Opera browser that we all love.
In this article, we are going to see Opera GX vs Opera and see which you should use and why. However, the company also makes Opera GX which they refer to as a Gaming Browser. It has features such as a built-in VPN, ads-blocker, etc. Only because in a working environment I don't want loads of clutter and random search history.Opera is one of the oldest browsers in the industry, and it is one of the best as well. Firefox is pretty much my go-to anything non-work related. I use multiple browsers for different things. The biggest issue I've personally had happen in firefox is black boxes randomly appearing in-browser, but was extremely easy to fix.įirefox is one of the few programs I feel happy to recommend to any user. I've used it for significantly longer than Chrome, and it still has less issues. I've used Firefox for almost my computing life, sometimes using Chrome (or other Chromium based browsers), Edge, Internet explorer, and even Steams browser, and across multiple operating systems and computers.Īs a whole, firefox has been the most stable, least issues, user friendly browser that I've used. Cant trust Firefox Mobile apps aren't like desktop programs. It was a nightmare - layer over layer, parts of the screen were flickering. Originally posted by littlecat20160:i tried Firefox on Android just to check facebook.
I thought this was referring to the idea that Chrome puts tabs into a separate process like it was the only one doing it. Seems Chrome does more "sandboxing" and/or the disparity is larger on the mobile browsers. This is part of what originally gave Chrome such high memory use over other browsers, and even though other browsers also do this, the stigma that ONLY Chrome has a MUCH higher memory usage remains (not saying it does or doesn't have higher use some times but a major reason was due to that which isn't exclusive to it anymore).Įdit: Just skimmed some bits of the article you linked later. However, if you're referring to what I think you are, which is giving each tab its own process, Firefox has also been doing this for a long while now. Chromium is more secure.I can't speak to security so I won't even try to, as that is not an area of knowledge for me. When it comes to security like being hacked, tab isolation etc. Originally posted by Felix:There is a difference between privacy and security