I use Seamonkey and like it a lot. Works for me. My browser usage isn't anything terribly demanding. I do need to use text magnification, because of not-very-good eyesight. I use Eudora for my POP mail client, not Thunderbird. Don't use/do chat. No time for that. One of the nifty things that Seamonkey has added lately is "remembering" where I save web pages depending upon the web site I am browsing at the moment. So it defaults to the correct folder when I'm saving an on-line purchase, etc. When I upgrade, I seem to keep all of my personal settings which is nice. Only thing is when I set up Seamonkey on a new/different machine, I can't figure out how to get to all of the settings I'm using on my "regular" machine that have been carried forward "forever." If I took a little time I could figure out what is the configuration file that I should copy over to the new / different machine. When I try any other browser, I can't find the handles and don't stick with it until I learn the interface. I occasionally try another browser only when a web page is not displaying properly, and it's important.
Seamonkey must have enough users that the developer community feels it is worthwhile to keep it up to date. Updates come out fairly regularly.
I use Seamonkey and like it a lot. Works for me. My browser usage isn't anything terribly demanding. I do need to use text magnification, because of not-very-good eyesight. I use Eudora for my POP mail client, not Thunderbird. Don't use/do chat. No time for that. One of the nifty things that Seamonkey has added lately is "remembering" where I save web pages depending upon the web site I am browsing at the moment. So it defaults to the correct folder when I'm saving an on-line purchase, etc. When I upgrade, I seem to keep all of my personal settings which is nice. Only thing is when I set up Seamonkey on a new/different machine, I can't figure out how to get to all of the settings I'm using on my "regular" machine that have been carried forward "forever." If I took a little time I could figure out what is the configuration file that I should copy over to the new / different machine. When I try any other browser, I can't find the handles and don't stick with it until I learn the interface. I occasionally try another browser only when a web page is not displaying properly, and it's important. Seamonkey must have enough users that the developer community feels it is worthwhile to keep it up to date. Updates come out fairly regularly.
http://www.opendns.com/