The user has basic computer literacy, which is why having auto updates is something they’d like for the convenience. Addons are needed for uBlock Origins and such.

Having used Firefox for so many years, I honestly haven’t a clue. Should i go with just vanilla Chromium? Or are there better options? Thanks in advance, Lemmy.

  • @onlooker@lemmy.mlOP
    link
    fedilink
    23 years ago

    Thanks, those are very good points. I’ll keep them in mind.

    I would very much choose Firefox. The user in question tried it in the past, but unfortunately didn’t like it.

    • Helix
      link
      fedilink
      53 years ago

      The user in question should just try it again.

      • @onlooker@lemmy.mlOP
        link
        fedilink
        83 years ago

        I’m asking because they explicitly said they don’t want Firefox. I’m formatting their PC and if possible, would like to move them away from Chrome due to the privacy issues that come with it. Yes, I’m aware and agree that Firefox is the better option, but I’m trying to meet them half-way.

        • Helix
          link
          fedilink
          63 years ago

          Most of the time, if people have no clue about tech and say they want or don’t want software X, they have no real reason for it.

          I bet they couldn’t even tell you what exactly they didn’t like. I worked as an IT consultant for years and the amount of people telling me to set up a specific software without even knowing what it does or what features it has is staggering.

          I once had a client request I ‘set up SAP’ without even specifying which of their products. They heard all successful companies used SAP. Turns out they didn’t need a year long expensive ERP migration but they used a totally outdated version of their existing ERP solution. After upgrading that and installing a plugin for QR code scanning and generation for easier inventory, their requirements were fulfilled.

          In many cases my clients were happier with the alternatives provided after we did a thorough analysis on their requirements. They often saved time and money and at some point realised that there’s a reason they asked an IT professional to help them.

          If your user has a good reason for not wanting Firefox, install Chromium, set up Edge, go to alternativeto.net and find an obscure alternative like Midori… but you don’t even mentioned a real reason or requirements to work with here, so you can literally use any browser. Even firefox. We don’t even know if your user cares about privacy.

        • @Reaton@lemmy.ml
          link
          fedilink
          33 years ago

          Do you know why they didn’t like it the first time? I know people who didn’t like the UI design. If that user didn’t like FF for that reason, then the new interface design should solve the problem.

          • Tredkip ツ
            link
            fedilink
            53 years ago

            Literally all modern browsers look and behave the same, so, I will never understand people saying such statements…

            • @Reaton@lemmy.ml
              link
              fedilink
              13 years ago

              They behave the same but FF had an older design than most of the other “big” browsers. Not that I thought it was ugly, but it’s undeniable that there was less effort put into the visuals.

              • Helix
                link
                fedilink
                1
                edit-2
                3 years ago

                I thought Firefox’ design was functional. Now they plan on disconnecting the tab bar from the tab itself which makes not a lot of sense from a UX design viewpoint. Let’s see if users like it…

                Mozilla already has a really low userbase. They do stuff like the Pocket integration and pointless redesigns to alienate them even further.

                I have used Firefox as my main browser since Firefox 0.9. I never warmed up to any of the Chromium-based alternatives. But even I think that Mozilla likes to fuck up from time to time.