Tom and Rafe square off on whether Chrome or Firefox is best for your browsing. Listen now: Download today’s podcast Subscribe now: iTunes (audio) | iTunes (video) | RSS (audio) | RSS (video) Which should you use? Rafe and Tom discuss Speed Ease of use Plugins-Addons Downloads Compatibility Security Other browsers IE, Opera, Safari ******************COMMERCIAL*****************************A Gadget ZoneON FIREFOX Hi Tom and Rafe I use Firefox because of its ability to remember what position I previously scaled the resolution to fit my tv (monitor). Example Cnet Tv does not scale well because of the video player. However Cnet Homepage scales great, so I scale the homepage to fit the screen but leave the Cnet Tv page set to its default size. Chrome does not remember the scaling upon restart nor does it have the ability to scale on one web page and not another. Chrome does not correctly display web pages as designed. Example Chrome does not display Cnet Tv tabs correctly. The tabs are displayed on two rows above the player, So I decided to use Firefox, the new 3.5 beta 4, its fast, dependable and has features that I need. If you use a large screen HDTV to display web pages I recommend using Firefox. Final thought Chrome is really fast and I think the tab features are great. For home use I would use Firefox, for work I would use Chrome. I am looking forward to the show. Jimmie from KCA Gadget ZoneON CHROME Tom/Rafe, I love using Google Chrome. I tried using for my company’s internal website, but it displays html codes in some form fields, it is kind of annoying. Love the show, Mandeep ********** When you do a search in Chrome, every occurrence of the string is highlighted. Not only that, but the line that each results is on is marked on the scroll bar, so you can scroll through the text normally but still see where every occurrence is. -The way that Chrome handles searching is better than Firefox. In Firefox you have a search bar which takes up extra space. And you have to choose your search engine from a drop-down menu. And you have to remember to change it back by default. -In Chrome, if I wanted to search Wikipedia instead of Google, I would begin to type Wikipedia. After a few letters, upon being prompted, I would press tab and then type in the search string. -Firefox supports AdblockPlus, the best way to block ads. Chrome doesn’t have any good ad blocking program. Tony QUESTIONS Dear Tom and Rafe, First off, I’ve been a longtime listener since before Rafe was permanently on the cast. This is my first time to write in though, and this one’s mostly for Rafe. I’ll try to make this short and to the point. I too have 2 security cameras (Axis 207W) and a WHS (homebuilt). My router is WRT54GS (which also loses internet connectivity daily) with a EZSX88W switch for more jacks. I wired the house to include the cameras so there’s no need for wireless. How do I (do you) access the cameras remotely? You briefly went over it on the real deal but I need a bit more please. You assigned them each a port number. How do you do that? You use a WHS addon to get to the cameras. Which one, and how? Please help if you have a few moments, it would be greatly appreciated. I’m in the Army and I’m gone from
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The Real Deal 164: Chrome vs. Firefox