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by avikalpa
3652 days ago
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Your App loading speed is same in both Firefox and Chrome latest versions. IMO, I would recommend you to support both Firefox and Chrome. Let me give you an example,
I had never heard of Polarr Editor. Then one fine day as I browsed the Chrome store I found it to be pretty good. It even has a web version for both Chrome and Firefox. But it lacks so much exposure. Same goes for webflow. Why lose consumers? Conclusion,
There are some Apps in the Chrome web store exclusive to Chrome that suffer from the inexposure to Firefox. Most developers use both Chrome and FF alternatively as they wish. And FF's share of users is more tech oriented. 1% of web browser share equivalents around 1 million users or more. Now, the math is self-explanatory. Hope it helps. |
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Firefox was slower with the UX animations. It seemed to skip frames/uglify the animations. Though I did not have a lot of problems with bugs that crippled the application. Internet Explorer was mainly the browser with crippling bugs that were sometimes hard to fix.
The counter point to the "carrot" of more users from Firefox is that I'm working with limited resources. I feel like if I hired another developer, one of the things they could start out on is cross-browser compatibility. But right now, in order to get those firefox users, I have to sacrifice somewhere else. I don't think not supporting all major browsers is a good long term strategy, but I think it might be a necessary early-stage strategy.