

- #Bookmacster sync how to#
- #Bookmacster sync upgrade#
- #Bookmacster sync mac#
- #Bookmacster sync windows#
In my observations the area drawn by Firefox is more that twice as big as the one by IE. The task manager area "under the curve" reflects the power used - the more CPU used for a given amount of time - the more power used.
#Bookmacster sync windows#
Do the same with IE, silence.īTW I otherwise haven't IE used for daily browsing, but I did a lot of tests with the same pages to see that it's not an accident and that IE does show the same content, but with less power used.įor somebody with a different computer: find any web page with more media playing on the page (you should see the videos playing or pictures "animating"), open the task manager (this is a Windows example) then switch to the graph view and compare the browsers while looking at the graph view. So for me is simply: open some page, hear the fan for as long as the page remains open. My notebook happens to have a fan calibrated to turn on when the CPU gets "too hot" where the point is above of what is consumed by IE to show the pages with more videos, so I actually hear the power consumption of Firefox and I simply don't hear it for the same page when opened in IE. It's increasingly difficult at this point to convince myself that native browsers don't make the most sense. Webkit can be forked again and it has a significant userbase to act as a counterweight to Blink. I definitely love FF as much as anyone here but I'm not one who argues that Gecko is necessary for a standards-based web, I'm not convinced by the argument. The dedicated search bar is a huge one, I can't imagine why no one else at least offers that, as a feature it can't cause that much maintenance headache. I love Firefox quite a bit, every detail, the way it scrolls with smooth scrolling off, the dedicated search bar for switching DuckDuckGo bangs, the container support. Single-platform browsers (Edge and Safari) work a bit differently than multi-platform browsers (Firefox and Chrome) do." "Note: Painting and compositing is where browser rendering engines are the most different from each other. I found this article on WebRender to be very interesting on this front. Scriptable to collect new bookmarks from NetNewsWire or similar apps.If you would share any of your findings, I'd be interested to see that.įrom what I've read, Mozilla can't really optimize rendering to the level of Safari & Edge. Supports multiple user profiles in Firefox and Google Chrome.
#Bookmacster sync how to#
You control which folders you want to be sorted or not sorted, how to sort them.

Sort (alphabetize) automatically when bookmarks are changed.
#Bookmacster sync upgrade#
Verifies bookmarks, fixes redirects, duplicates, can upgrade insecure bookmarks and remove URL cruft. Easily organize with tags, hierarchy, or both. Import/export with Firefox, Chrome, Safari, Opera, Vivaldi, iCab, Roccat, Pinboard, Diigo, and OmniWeb.

#Bookmacster sync mac#
Bookmarks added to Safari from BookMacster on your Mac will sync via iCloud to Safari on iOS devices. Compatible with iCloud's Safari syncing, Google Chrome's Sign In, and Firefox Sync. Keep your bookmarks in one central store, accessible within web browsers. Sync bookmarks of Safari Firefox, Chrome, and more among all your devices.ĭirectly. Verify, fix dupes, consolidate.Ĭross-Browser Syncing.

BookMacster is a bookmarks manager for your Mac, which plays nicely with iCloud, Sign In to Chrome, and Firefox Sync. Organize and manage bookmarks, sync across browsers.
