Chrome, Firefox, and HTML5
I’m a huge Firefox fan at work. As I’ve written about previously, it has tons of extensions that help me do my work, and the fact that it’s very fast is a huge plus.
At home, my wife and I use the same PC for our ‘couch browsing’, and since we don’t want to have to logoff & log back on every time to check our email, we’ve taken to using different browsers to handle it for us. She uses Firefox and I use Chrome – just because, when I installed it, Chrome was in beta and I wanted her using something familiar to her.
Having said that, the more I’ve used Chrome over the last months, the more I’ve liked it. Just to be clear, I’ve never disliked it: I just like Firefox more. But I’ve been finding myself more and more lately using Chrome instead of Firefox for my regular browsing, even on my main PC. Extensions have definitely helped here, but I think it’s just the rock-solid stability of it, the incredible ease of use, the minimal U/I approach (ok.. in Firefox this is my fault), and the SPEED.
I know that both Google and Mozilla are paying close attention to HTML5, too, and was surprised to see that, at the moment, Firefox seems to be leading Chrome for HTML5 and CSS3 support, although Youtube’s HTML5 video support is only for Chrome (and Safari) . I suspect (hope??) that this is going to be the next major battleground for web-standards, finally killing the proprietary standards of both Adobe Flashplayer and Microsoft’s Silverlight in one fell swoop. Hey, at least I can dream, right? I’m pleased to see that Microsoft seems to be largely ignoring HTML5, which is their M.O. for any new ‘standard’ that’s not theirs, and am hoping that this means that the IE standard will finally die. Again, probably wishful thinking.
update 3/3/10: DRAT! Microsoft is going to be paying attention to HTML5 after all.
