Things I liked:
- Fast
- Minimalistic design
- Seperate processes in each tab
- Not buggy as my Firefox 3 was at first glance
- Incognito, even though I haven't used it yet.
- Open source, although I probably won't be doing much with it.
Things I didn't like:
- History and Download page. I prefer Firefox 3's little download manager to a random search page. Those pages are not as handy as built-in stuff. I like the history bar on the side.
- Options are tucked off to a corner to kind of "dumb it down," a la IE. An inconspicuous, hide-able toolbar is just fine for those of us who are going to be playing with the advanced options more often.
- Omnibar. Ctrl-L and Ctrl-K to choose whether I want to search or go to a location feels a lot more natural than the omnibar. And I swear Firefox 3's smart location bar finds what I want much more often than Chrome's.
- Home page. Pretty pineappleing useless; I have a bookmark toolbar already.
- Few add-ons at the moment.
I've had enough of Chrome, I'll stick to using Firefox for now. Maybe it's because I'm used to it, maybe i'm biased, but Chrome isn't very comfortable right now. It's the most user-friendly, easy-to-learn, and still useful browser I've tried other than Firefox (eww Safari + IE, and Opera has way too many damn features), I'll give it that much.
- Fast
- Minimalistic design
- Seperate processes in each tab
- Not buggy as my Firefox 3 was at first glance
- Incognito, even though I haven't used it yet.
- Open source, although I probably won't be doing much with it.
Things I didn't like:
- History and Download page. I prefer Firefox 3's little download manager to a random search page. Those pages are not as handy as built-in stuff. I like the history bar on the side.
- Options are tucked off to a corner to kind of "dumb it down," a la IE. An inconspicuous, hide-able toolbar is just fine for those of us who are going to be playing with the advanced options more often.
- Omnibar. Ctrl-L and Ctrl-K to choose whether I want to search or go to a location feels a lot more natural than the omnibar. And I swear Firefox 3's smart location bar finds what I want much more often than Chrome's.
- Home page. Pretty pineappleing useless; I have a bookmark toolbar already.
- Few add-ons at the moment.
I've had enough of Chrome, I'll stick to using Firefox for now. Maybe it's because I'm used to it, maybe i'm biased, but Chrome isn't very comfortable right now. It's the most user-friendly, easy-to-learn, and still useful browser I've tried other than Firefox (eww Safari + IE, and Opera has way too many damn features), I'll give it that much.

