On Wed, Jun 26, 2019 at 04:12:02PM -0400, Stephen John Smoogen wrote:
On Wed, 26 Jun 2019 at 15:59, Robert Heller heller@deepsoft.com wrote:
OK, I recently ugraded to the current ESR release of Firefox for CentOS 6. And I am having problems with the user interface (basically it has become hard [for me] to use).
What alternitives are there? (Chrome and Chromium are not possible with CentOS, and Chrome and Chromium are actually worse).
Long story short.. there aren't any that work well. The web standards are constantly changing, and you end up with a web browser where all the pages look like crap through little fault of the browser. Most browser teams get burned out and realize they are better off shaving yaks for sweater wool. Other teams do some level of good enough but they also have to keep up with newer things which means that trying to run it on EL6 is not going to be something they want to add to their pile of crap. They also tend towards keeping up with the Joneses so their interfaces will look like whatever is Firefox/Chromiums current layout.
In the end, there are three bad choices:
- Keep an out of date and buggy browser you can work with.. set up the
system to be as sandboxed as possible and assume it is always hacked. 2. Learn to love and/or help improve some text based browser. Since the graphical layouts will change constantly as GUI standards change.. this is where I am headed. 3. Try to find a browser out of the few remaining others that works.. most will want you to be running something much more modern than EL6 (and even EL7 is probably going to be too old for many). 4. Just use browsers as little as possible and decide to live out life as a yak herder. [OK this is probably where I am really headed]
Sorry I don't have happier answersS
I occasionally use Vivaldi (on C7) and find it to be a decent browser. I don't know how or even if it works on C6.
A potential problem is that everybody (even MS!!) except firefox uses the same browser engine, and that is one developed by Google who seems determined to take over the web just like MS tried with IE.