| ▲ | traderj0e 2 hours ago | |||||||
Chrome has gone off doing their own standards to some extent, but you're forgetting what it was like when Internet Explorer dominated. You basically couldn't use the web without IE because they broke so many standards and implemented them in closed source. Then there was ActiveX on top, straight up Windows binaries in web. And besides there being a dominant engine, only one browser could use that engine. Trading that for Chrome dominance was at least a step up. I use Firefox right now. Occasionally I need to open a site in Chrome instead, but it's rare. | ||||||||
| ▲ | ndriscoll 2 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||
Chrome didn't solve that though. Quoth Wikipedia: > Firefox usage share grew to a peak of 32.21% in November 2009, with Firefox 3.5 overtaking Internet Explorer 7, although not all versions of Internet Explorer as a whole; Firefox was the browser that embraced open standards and was unseating IE. And ActiveX was used for corporate stuff, not general web sites, so the main reason it died was that Microsoft gave up. | ||||||||
| ||||||||