It gets my goat that people think it’s a good option. There are plenty of articles explaining some of the many issues with it, but a few are:

  1. It’s run by anti-LGBTQ+ crypto bros.
  2. It has ads right out of the box.
  3. It collected donations towards people who never signed up for them - then held them to ransom in exchange for the kind of information you should never share on the Internet.
  4. They’re a for-profit advertising company. “Privacy-centric” my elbow.
  • cybirdman@lemmy.ca
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    8 hours ago

    Please try Zen browser. I can’t go back to any other browser since I switched

    • MissesAutumnRains@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      5 hours ago

      How does Zen handle blocking adds? I peeked at them but didn’t see anything like uBlock in the mod list. No proton mods there either, which is a tough sell for me.

      Usability looks awesome though. I’m tempted for that alone.

      Edit: I just realized it’s a fork like WaterFox so it will just work. I did also learn there are some weird check ins with Google on that browser though, so maybe not the more security focused browser I’m looking for.

      • Hudell@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        7 hours ago

        Its tab and session management tools are my favorite across all browsers.

        I use vertical tabs with multiple layers of folders to basically keep everything I need to access frequently organized directly on the tab list instead of having to open it again whenever I need (also saves me from having to remember if I already opened something). For example I have a folder for each project I’m working on and I add to it everything related to that project. Project definition links, Github Pull Requests and so on. The PR links stay there while I wait for them to be reviewed or merged so I can quickly access them to see if they need any action. Once the task is done I remove them from the folder again.

        There’s a new feature named Live Folders which automatically opens a tab for every item of an RSS or Github feed. I use it to auto open PRs that are waiting for my review. The feature is still quite limited but already pretty useful.

        One of the projects I’m working on is a voice chat web app and the browser helps me by allowing me to open two different sessions of the web app side by side as a single app. Makes it so much easier to test things when I don’t have to be handling two different active windows like I used to have to with other browsers.

        One other feature that I don’t use so much anymore is the ability to have completely separate tab lists for different contexts. It’s useful to separate work and personal stuff for example, but I already use separate devices for that.

      • cybirdman@lemmy.ca
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        5 hours ago

        It has a strong focus on workflow improvements. I love the way it handles pinned tabs where third party links open as a modal and you can reset the tab with a middle click. It also has very good workspace management and useful keybinds.

    • 4am@lemmy.zip
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      7 hours ago

      Zen’s not great on a multi-monitor setup, but I like it otherwise. Video playback has been improved a ton since I last tried it.

      • cybirdman@lemmy.ca
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        5 hours ago

        What is your issue with multi monitor setups? On my Mac and Linux machines I have no issues

    • Hudell@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      7 hours ago

      Me too. Ironically I don’t like its default UI (supposedly its main feature), but after a few setting changes it is great.