what i’ve gathered from people i talk to about it is that a lot of it comes down to convenience. edge comes pre installed and microsoft makes it not super straightforward to switch. i’m sure most people could figure it out if they wanted to, but lots of people don’t want to “futz around” with their computer. it also doesn’t help that edge is pretty much the only thing that works with windows search along with certain outlook and teams features.
i like to spend time messing around and customizing my computer to be better (i still use vim as my main editor), but for many people its annoying and they don’t want to “fix it if it isn’t broken”. this is all just a very long winded way of saying they don’t really care it’s not the optimal solution, as long as it works.
Newby@startrek.website 1 year ago
Edge’s vertical tabs and splitscreen are killer features that I cannot replicate without issues on firefox or chrome.
Death@lemmy.world 1 year ago
I’ve been using tree style tab on firefox for maybe almost 10 years and rarely have any issue unless the firefox update broke it which also rarely happens
filcuk@lemmy.zip 1 year ago
I’m using different vertical tabs (forget the name), have the top hidden, except if I hover over specific region, have various identities (containers?) Implementwd within the vertical sidebar and two profiles that show as a separate app on the toolbar.
Firefox is great.
Newby@startrek.website 1 year ago
Tried and just not as seamless and edge. The groupings and simplicity is killer. Currently running a variant of tst on Firefox and it is just ok.
wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 year ago
I’ve not used the in browser splitscreen, but can’t you just use the window snapping feature built into the Windows OS itself for that?
Winkey+any arrow key Minimize, Maximize, snap to left or right half of screen.
Newby@startrek.website 1 year ago
The issue with that is then the vertical tab bar is in the center wasting space.