passthejoe — the blog

Firefox vs. Chrome on Windows and Linux

I spent quite a bit of time running Google Chrome/Chromium on both Windows and Linux, but between feeling uncomfortable giving away so much data to Google (when logged in on Chrome) and how well Firefox performs on Linux (which is very well from what I can see), I now use Firefox about 99 percent of the time in Fedora 20.

But on my Windows 7 work machine, which is a more powerful (quad-core AMD to my laptop’s dual-core, with 8 GB of RAM to the laptop’s 4 GB), I flip it, using Chrome about 99 percent of the time.

So I’ve been switching it up to see how I might like using more Chrome in Linux and more Firefox in Windows.

I’ll keep it short. There’s nothing about Chrome on my laptop in Fedora 20 that makes me want to use it. It’s no faster and no more stable. And SELinux doesn’t much like it (and I get warnings).

I spent the whole day yesterday in Windows 7 on my big box running Firefox (version 27 on both machines for the record) for everything. It was measurably slower, and I had a few periods of non-responsiveness, especially with my customary 15-20 open tabs.

This means I’ll be sticking with Firefox on my Linux-running laptop (and for my personal use, where I’m not so crazy about Google spying and Chrome on my workplace desktop, where I’m already using Google Apps and am not doing any personal business (and could care less if Google knows about my web use as it relates).

#Firefox #Chrome #Web_browsers #Linux #Fedora #Windows