this post was submitted on 20 Jun 2026
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[–] Dagnet@lemmy.world 16 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

Tab management on Vivaldi is second to none. I pray every day that they swap to a Firefox backend one day, would be the best browser by a mile

[–] TheMadCodger@piefed.social 4 points 2 weeks ago

That's why I still use them as my main. I can't close tabs, so between their workspaces with tiled tabs and tab memory management not keeping 200 processes open (I know!) it's been amazing for me. My only reservation is it being chromium.

[–] brsrklf@jlai.lu 3 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

What makes firefox's backend better? I've been considering switching from it lately.

[–] Dagnet@lemmy.world 16 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)
[–] blah3166@piefed.social 9 points 2 weeks ago

Basically this.

Any browser that leverages Google's Chromium project is enabling Google to continue to drive the web. Alternative browsers, first and foremost, must not be built using Chromium.

[–] TheMadCodger@piefed.social 6 points 2 weeks ago

Not that Firefox's back end is better rather that every other browser out there is some form of chromium which means Google getting to control the internet.

[–] calcopiritus@lemmy.world 2 points 1 week ago

Chromium based ones are at the mercy of Google. Firefox, however, is independent in that sense.

When google decides to drop support for manifest V2 (which is the one unlock origin uses), every chromium browser drops support for it. Unless they make a fork of chromium and add manifest V2 back in. Which means extra effort every time they want to update with upstream, since there probably will be merge conflicts.

Firefox can just not drop support for it, literally 0 effort.