![]() Most of the time, Firefox would fill that need.įirefox’s Gecko rendering engine is widely compatible, and this open source, standards-based browser is remarkably consistent across all major platforms (Mac, Windows, and Linux). Firefoxīut the occasional site incompatibility and web development work would bring up the need to use an alternate browser. ![]() With version 2, Safari reclaimed the speed advantage that it had lost to Firefox in OS X 10.3.x, and I was hooked on Safari’s new RSS integration. With the arrival of Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger and Safari 2, I thought I could finally settle in with one browser. Although web standards are more closely adhered to than in the past, we all know the “try it in another browser” routine. And Opera or iCab might handle what fails in the other browsers. What chokes in Safari might render properly in Firefox. Will we ever be able to live with just one web browser on our Macs? It seems unlikely for a number of reasons.įirst and foremost, no one browser works with all sites.
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