On Mon, 2004-11-15 at 15:31 +0100, Reinout van Schouwen wrote: > > is because I have to use Windows at work, and so Firefox is what I am > > used to. > > I don't follow this argumentation One thing that always bugs me in Windows is that using the mouse wheel scrolls the focused window and not the hovered-over window. Another is the lack of workspaces. When I had to use Windows over the summer, I had to learn to get used to these differences. One difference is very minor; the other is a bit more important. However, I found myself -- on Linux at home -- using a single workspace and hovering over windows before scrolling. Epiphany on Linux feels *very* different from Firefox on Windows. I didn't really investigate why. However, if I had been at work for more than just the summer, I'd *have* to have done *something*, since using the browser at work was unbearable. Firefox isn't a bad browser, but it's too "different". Point is, I'm one person, not two, so having two browsers is difficult. All the little differences really, really add up. They're why I prefer Epiphany -- but if I had to use Firefox every day at work for more than just one summer, I'd consider switching at home, too. -- Adam Hooper <adamh densi com>
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