| > Something called Edge from Microsoft is available for iOS (where it is a rebranded WebKit) and on Android (where it is a rebranded Blink, IIRC). Why is it a problem that it uses webkit on iOS and Android? Why reinvent the wheel, when those rendering engines are already optimized for those platforms? The thing I care about is that it supports syncing of settings. > If you primarily work with Windows 10, Edge makes some sense, otherwise it makes no sense. If you primarily work with Mac OS, Safari makes some sense, otherwise it makes no sense. Why do I never hear that complaint? Also, Edge on iOS and Android will soon have a built-in adblocker. > The only downside to it I see is that you are using Windows 10... I value privacy and control of my devices a little more than 10% of battery efficiency. Have you ever looked at the privacy controls of Windows? Also the battery efficiency is significantly more than 10%, and try find me an as versatile and user friendly alternative OS for pen capable 2-in-1s, that has better privacy controls. |
Yes, but I work on all three desktop OSes, and two mobile OSs; I picked Firefox, which I use everywhere except on iOS (where it does exist, but is not really Firefox, even if it does sync with the rest of the Firefoxen).
> Also, Edge on iOS and Android will soon have a built-in adblocker.
Cool. Firefox already does, and I can also use it on Linux and Mac.
> Have you ever looked at the privacy controls of Windows?
Yes, I have, and they are horrible; Have you?. I cannot stop telemetry or updates (unless LTSB which I can't even get, or enterprise which is too expensive to get for home), I can't get security updates without eveything else that Microsoft decides to bundle even if I did use LTSB or Enterprise. I have no way to verify exactly what Microsoft sends to their servers (and their description is incomplete and out of date, if you care to trust it).
The upgrade-to-windows-10 dark patterns are what you should consider when you think "windows control & privacy".
> Also the battery efficiency is significantly more than 10%,
Not in my experience of Edge vs Firefox, unless things have changed very dramatically in the last few months.
> and try find me a more versatile and user friendly alternative OS for pen capable 2-in-1s, that has better privacy controls.
"versatile" and "user friendly" are very subjective terms; I curse every minute I have to work with Windows after having used a consistently set up linux machine (and even MacOS is a little clunky in comparison). "pen capable 2-in-1" is a very specific requirement that means nothing to me and (I would guess) 95% of the users.
In my biased sample of the world, PCs have gone back to being work devices, and everything else is being done on the phone, with cloud sync bridging the gaps. I know a few people who bought a 2-in-1 but no one uses them except as a laptop except on very very rare occasions.