The real reason everyone stays on Chrome despite its terrible privacy track record - Neowin
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One of the reasons it has become easier over the years to move from Windows to Linux is because of the development of web technologies. For example, back in 2008, when I first used Linux, Microsoft Word was a quintessential program to have installed on your computer. It wasn’t available for Linux and the best you could do was use OpenOffice, which as we all know, isn’t perfectly compatible with Office documents.
Developments in web technologies have made it possible to use things like Word and Google Docs in the web browser with perfect compatibility with Word documents and parity in feature support. It is a similar story with gaming, if you’re not a diehard gamer who wants the very best performance, you can use the browser to play games via services like Nvidia GeForce NOW.
Alongside these developments, we have seen one web browser, Google Chrome, become utterly dominant across on the desktop and mobile, while other players have slunk into irrelevance. While this could be put down to the dominance of Android and Chrome being bundled as the default browser, I also think there is another reason that people stick with Chrome, and it is also the reason I use Chrome as my daily driver, and it is this: Chrome doesn’t get too adventurous adding new user-facing features or UI overhauls.
Just look at Firefox, Edge, Brave, and Opera. Mozilla is the chief offender when it comes to browser refreshes, it seems there is a complete UI overhaul every few years and every time they alienate their users, their market share falls. Edge, Brave, and Opera are not as bad with their UI overhauls, but they do shove a load of unnecessary features in people’s faces, which Google refrains from doing with Chrome - making it a simpler browser for people to use.
By keeping the browser simple, familiar, and decluttered, it allows users to focus on the websites they are visiting, rather than some stupid feature or nag (I’m looking at you, Edge) distracting them. Additionally, the time not spent doing UI tweaks ensures that the background features of the browser work properly and work with all the newest web technologies that enable more powerful web apps.
One of the reasons that you won’t see advertisements in Google Chrome is because Google can afford not to display them. It is a behemoth of a company rolling around in money and it can afford to just put the ads in Google Search or on YouTube, instead of bogging down the browser directly.
This is in direct conflict with Opera, which is just a browser company. It doesn’t have a search engine or a massive video sharing website to place ads in instead, so you get things such as sponsored tiles on your new tab page. In Brave, ever since it started, it has attempted to monetize via its cryptocurrency BAT. The idea being that users get rewarded for viewing Brave’s ads in the browser and then Brave taking a cut from advertisers. While this is optional, the inclusion of a wallet in the browser is extra clutter that Chrome users don’t need to worry about. It might be a nice feature for power users, but many people wouldn’t care about it.
One of the things I like about Chrome is that it hasn't changed much since I used the beta builds nearly 20 years ago, the icon tabs on top and single URL bar are all still there. Sure there are new features like tab groups and now split view, but these are in the background and you’d never know they were there unless you right-clicked on the tabs. This is what normal people want, they want to learn something once and then be productive.
Mozilla Firefox is the complete antithesis of this. We had the classic Firefox with tabs under the URL bar back with 3.5 and 3.6 then we got a reasonable overhaul with Firefox 4, where tabs were shifted to the top. After that we got the Australis, Photon, Proton, and now, Nova overhauls none of which seemed that necessary, but all brought big UI changes, potentially confusing more casual users. It is like the company gets bored if it doesn’t completely change things periodically, despite it invariably creating backlash from users.
Google Chrome version 53, the core UI has not changed much in 95 versions.
Google Chrome on the other hand has opted for a much more stable design. Back in 2008, Google unveiled its Chrome beta with tabs on top. For those not around back then, this was revolutionary, but Google could afford to be revolutionary as it was building the browser from scratch.
It emphasized separate tab processes to keep Chrome running fast and a minimalist interface to let you focus on the web page instead of the browser. Over the years, it has added features to Chrome such as extension support, but it managed to keep the browser quick and extensions tucked away in their own little section next to the...