

- #CHROME VS SAFARI FOR MAC INSTALL#
- #CHROME VS SAFARI FOR MAC PASSWORD#
- #CHROME VS SAFARI FOR MAC PLUS#
A lack of extension support also means you can’t use other useful web tools, such as CamelCamelCamel to check price histories on Amazon, or Honey to save money while shopping.There’s no bookmarks bar, so you have to access bookmarks through the menu bar instead.
#CHROME VS SAFARI FOR MAC INSTALL#
Tab management is a hassle, as you can’t view your full browsing history, use vertical tabs, install sites as apps, or customize the new tab page.(Also, any web history you want to hide must be deleted after the fact.) There’s no incognito mode, so you can’t easily browse the web in a logged-out state, which is useful for temporarily logging into secondary accounts or looking for non-personalized results on certain websites.To search on other sites, you must add special symbols (such as “g!” for Google) to your query or visit their websites directly. DuckDuckGo doesn’t support other default search engines.
#CHROME VS SAFARI FOR MAC PASSWORD#
DuckDuckGo is encouraging users to import their logins to its own built-in password manager, but you can’t yet sync those passwords to mobile devices, nor can you use them with other browsers.

Extensions tend to go to Chrome first and Safari second - if ever. The ability to pin tabs is massive, and Safari - by not allowing pinned tabs and keeping favicons out of tabs - makes it hard to remember what is open and where. I haven't had major problems since the upgrade, but it's hard to shake the feeling that something bad could happen at any moment. Also if one tab crashed, then all of them needed to be reloaded. Mavericks improved it A LOT, but it still has its moments. Surprised I forgot about that.įeels more unstable than Chrome. Really good HTML and CSS support, sometimes better than Chrome (Safari handles background gradients much more nicely than Chrome for example).īookmarks and Reading List are good enough.ĮDIT: As others have pointed out, Safari is much kinder to the battery than Chrome. It used to take random amounts of time before iOS and OSX had matching tabs in iCloud tabs, but now it's basically instantaneous. ICloud tabs has improved a lot since its introduction. Info sync between OSX and iOS is really nice.
#CHROME VS SAFARI FOR MAC PLUS#
I use Command plus arrow keys, and that's essentially instantaneous. The back and forward gestures are fine, but I find them slower than Chrome's gestures. No redundant menus and all that like Chrome.ĭouble tap to zoom is brilliant. I mostly use Safari, but I take vacations in Chrome.įeels like a proper Mac app.
