March 26, 2011

Internet Explorer 9/ Chrome 10/ and FireFox 4 - (A Coparison)

 Find Best Browser- IE9/Chrome 10/Firefox 4

Installation and updates

Though Microsoft owns its own operating system, IE9 is still the most difficult of the three browsers to install, requiring a lengthier download and full system restart to get it running. This is likely due to its reported use of hardware acceleration and other features. Chrome and Firefox 4 both install relatively quickly and without a full machine reboot.
Finally, when it comes to updates, Chrome currently leads the pack. Google has been cranking out updates every few weeks (sometimes days) for its Chrome browser, changing and tweaking things on a consistent basis. However, unlike most update processes, the changes are very transparent, allowing users to install updates by simply restarting Chrome. There are no loading bars or lengthy downloads and re-installations. Mozilla is usually pretty good about updating Firefox and we look forward to how the final version of Firefox 4 handles patches and updates. Microsoft hasn’t yet commented on how it plans to handle updates to IE9, but we’re hoping it will adopt a model closer to Google’s. Hopefully we won’t have to wait two years before getting significant updates to Microsoft’s slick new browser.

Design & ease of use

If I didn’t know better, I’d say that the current trend in browser design is for the browser to disappear entirely. IE9, Firefox, and Chrome all attempt to be as minimal as possible, offering next to no actual text and small, monochromatic buttons that blend right into the look of operating systems like Windows 7 and OS X. Overall, all three browsers appear to achieve their goals fairly well, with different strengths and weaknesses.
Internet Explorer offers the leanest tab and address bar configuration, managing to cram every feature of IE into a single thin row of icons, even combining IE 8 search and address bars into a single combined search-address bar. Unfortunately, the thin design can look a bit cramped if users open a lot of tabs and the search-address bar sometimes has as many as four small buttons inside of it, meaning those who don’t have the browser window maximized may have a difficult time viewing much of the URL of their current Web page. Some users won’t have a problem with this. Notifications are an equally mixed bag. IE9 now places them at the bottom of the browser. At times, they are almost unnoticeable. Some people will like this, others will wish notifications were more prominent in the design.
 

Chrome designs its tabs with a shape that makes them look like manilla folder tabs, opting to have a thin second row for the address/search bar, back and forward navigation, home, refresh, bookmark, and options buttons. This design works well, but the two rows make it a bit thicker than IE9′s design; those with limited headroom may prefer IE9. Google’s design, like IE9, gets cluttered quickly when users start opening dozens of tabs. Still, Chrome’s single-click bookmarking method, where you simply highlight a star (Firefox 4 also has this feature) is easier and more natural than Internet Explorer’s two-click method of bookmarking.


A number of major sites have performed Web Standards tests on all three major browsers. The good news: they’re all excessively compliant. Unlike every version of Internet Explorer in recent memory, Microsoft has finally decided to go the extra mile and support general Web standards.
When it comes to HTML5 support, Microsoft has some work to do. In an HTML5 test performed by PCmag, Chrome and Firefox handily outperformed Internet Explorer 9, more than doubling its score. However, even Chrome only scored a 288 out of 400 on the test, meaning all three browsers have a ways to go to be truly compatible with all of the goodness HTML5 has to offer.

Speed

So most of the browsers are compatible with Web standards, but how do they rank in speed? Well, pretty close, actually. A casual user probably won’t notice a difference in the Web page rendering speed of Chrome, IE9, and Firefox 4. We performed our own tests and found that Chrome edged out IE9 which edged out Firefox 4 most of the time, but not by much. All three browsers are much faster and leaner than browsers even a few years ago.

Extras

Each browser does have its own slate of differentiating features.
With IE9, we really like its heavy integration with Windows 7. Many functions, like turning tabs into new windows are much easier with Microsoft’s new browser. It has some unique features as well, like individual tab previewing from the task bar and a new feature called tab pinning, which lets you ‘pin’ a Web site to the Windows 7 task bar. However, unlike an ordinary taskbar shortcut, pinned Web sites can offer customized “right click” menus. For example, pinning the Facebook toolbar will let you right click and auto browse to different sections of the Facebook site like News, Messages, Events, and Friends. In addition, when you open a pinned site, the IE9 browser customizes itself to resemble the site your viewing. Currently, this means an icon in the upper left and new colors for the back and forward buttons, but we like the idea.
  
     Chrome differentiates itself through its constant updates, but also through its extensive Web Apps Store, which offers apps that blur the line between Web and local apps in some unique ways. Finally, Firefox has a strong slate of extensions that back it up. Developers will have to retool many of these to support Firefox 4, but one colleague of mine refuses to leave Firefox solely because it offers unique extensions that have become essential to his browsing experience. Most other browsers support add-ons, but Firefox may have a lead in mindshare here. We look forward to seeing more Firefox 4 extensions.

Which browser is best?

Good question. It may come down to preference. Each browser has strengths and weaknesses. Most of us here at Digital Trends are Google Chrome users, mostly because, until Firefox 4 and IE9, it was undoubtedly the fastest browser of the bunch. Now, we don’t know what we’ll do. Chrome still probably offers the fastest and leanest overall browsing experience, but IE9 and Firefox have narrowed its lead significantly, each offering new features that many users will find helpful and time-saving. Still, for those who like the bleeding edge, Google’s fast and frequent browser updates are hard to pass up.
For the first time in a long time we can’t claim a strong victor here. All three major browsers offer a solid browsing experience with few downsides. Things are heating up in the browser world.

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