• @[email protected]
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    3032 months ago

    If your website only works with Chrome, it’s not a website. It’s a Chrome site.

    You didn’t design for the web. You designed for Chrome.

    • @[email protected]
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      1432 months ago

      Fuck chrome. Such a dogshit unoptimized spyware browser that now disables ad-blocking plugins

      • Lena
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        362 months ago

        I agree that Chrome fucking sucks, but it’s disingenuous to call it unoptimized. Chrome and chromium-based browsers are as fast as or faster than Firefox. Although I agree that manifest V3 is horrible to the web as a whole and shouldn’t have been created.

          • Lena
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            -52 months ago

            Have you used chrome or chromium in the past few years? Source?

            • @[email protected]
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              12 months ago

              I was exaggerating to make a point. But one of the main reasons why I switched to Firefox (about a year ago) was because it was eating up so much of my CPU.

          • @[email protected]
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            52 months ago

            *For a limited set of languages. Until they add Japanese I won’t be getting much use from it, sadly.

            • @[email protected]
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              22 months ago

              I use 10ten (previously Rikuchamp) for Japanese. I don’t think it does full translation, but it gives thorough dictionary lookups (from WWWJDIC) as mouseover tooltips. Very useful if you’re trying to learn the language, but maybe not so much if you just want to read stuff quickly. I think it’s now available for every major browser, but I mostly use it on FF.

          • borari
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            82 months ago

            Safari also has it built in. This person is just saying shit to say shit I guess.

          • @[email protected]
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            02 months ago

            AFAIK the built-in translator doesn’t support Japanese, which is 99% of translation I need and the extension (which is what is was trying to use before) either requires you to select the text that you want to translate one-by-one or run the whole page through translate.google.com, which doesn’t work with any page that requires an account to access or triggers ddos protection on some others.

    • @[email protected]
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      312 months ago

      Chrome is awful in nearly every way one can measure a browser. Anyone still using this as they’re main driver in 2025 is technologically challenged.

      • borari
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        322 months ago

        It’s wild to see Chrome going from the browser to use if you had any tech sense whatsoever to being universally derided.

        • @[email protected]
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          62 months ago

          Universally derided

          lol try looking outside lemmy. 90% of people still just use it and don’t care

          • @[email protected]
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            22 months ago

            At least in my country, google is going balls-to-the-walls mode with the chrome psyop. Like every third ad on youtube is an ad for chrome. And if you’re a little older, you’ll remember their countless other ad campaigns that propelled chrome into the mainstream. The only reason so many people use chrome is because they’re brainwashed into it.

    • Zagorath
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      2 months ago

      That’s not necessarily true. Circa 2016–17 I frequented a website that worked in Chrome but not Firefox. This was due to Firefox at the time not implementing web standards that Chrome did. Firefox only got around to it in 2019. So naturally, the developer of the site was telling people to use Chrome.

      • @[email protected]
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        882 months ago

        I don’t know the history of column span but the reason Firefox was “behind” on standards was because Google was pushing new standards through committee faster than competing browsers could keep up. Google would implement a new feature, offer it as a free standard, then get it through the committee. Because Google already had it in their browser, they were already compliant while Firefox had to scramble.

        It was Google doing their variation of “embrace, extend, extinguish”

        It got so bad that not even Microsoft had the resources to keep up. They said as much when they said they were adopting Chromium as their engine.

        • Zagorath
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          72 months ago

          Google was actually later to implement this particular standard than Edge and Safari, at least according to MDN. And I believe this was before Chredge.

      • @[email protected]
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        232 months ago

        I’m gonna be honest, if they used a feature that wasn’t ready for prime time, it’s still on them.

        • @[email protected]
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          2 months ago

          Totally agree. It’s not the fault of Firefox at all. This is just being trigger-happy on new standards before they are ready and unwillingness to fix a problem in a different way.

        • Zagorath
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          -42 months ago

          It got added because it worked extremely well on browsers that implemented it, and it solved a problem that was needed on the site in question, which was very difficult to solve otherwise. I can’t blame a site for using an open standard that works for a majority of its users and which makes the development effort significantly less.

      • @[email protected]
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        2 months ago

        This was due to Firefox at the time not implementing web standards that Chrome did.

        Uhm, yeah, that’s what browsers do. There are somewhere about 150 web standards and some are hard requirement while others are soft. Blink has some implemented that Webkit hasn’t but Gecko has and that’s true for all three. Same for browsers.

        Btw, the one with the most implemented standards is QtWebkit by far. It’s still slower tho.

        • Zagorath
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          52 months ago

          Yeah? I’m not saying there’s anything wrong with that. I’m saying it’s bullshit to say a developer has done a crap job when one browser doesn’t implement a web standard that is perfect tailor-made for their site’s use case.

          • @[email protected]
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            22 months ago

            Still a bad job tho, if his implementation requires things that aren’t common and has no workarounds in place.

          • Ethan
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            2 months ago

            If your job is to make websites and you make sites that don’t work on a browser that has over 100 million users you’re not doing your job.