March 28, 2024

12 Alternative Web Browsers You Should Try

Chances are you’re viewing this page in one of the following web browsers: Firefox, Internet Explorer, or Chrome. I can make this assumption because these three browsers combine for about 90% of the market share. Then again, you might be one of the few people that have adopted an alternative to the big name web browsers. Whatever the case, you do have options when it comes to web browsing. The three I’ve already mentioned have gained popularity for different reasons, but being popular doesn’t always mean something is the right fit for everybody.

In this article, we’ve rounded up 12 lesser known web browsers that you might want to try. Who knows – one of them might be a perfect fit for your browsing needs.

Maxthon

web browsers

Maxthon has been around for a while. In 2003 it was known as MyIE2. Over the years it’s become a powerful tabbed browser built for all users. Besides basic browsing functionality, Maxthon Browser provides a rich set of features to improve your surfing experience. Some key features include: mouse gestures, anti-freeze, and magic fill which allows your to fill out forms with a single click.

Operating System: Windows

Arora

web browsers

Arora is a lightweight cross-platform web browser. Arora uses the QtWebKit port of the fully standards-compliant WebKit layout engine. It features fast rendering, powerful JavaScript engine and supports Netscape plugins.

Operating System: Windows, Mac OS X, Linux

Amaya

web browsers

Amaya is not only a web browser, but it’s also a web editor. Browsing features are seamlessly integrated with the editing and remote access features in a uniform environment. This follows the original vision of the Web as a space for collaboration and not just a one-way publishing medium. Amaya is an open source software project hosted by W3C.

Operating System: Windows, Mac OS X, Unix platforms

Flock

web browsers

Flock is a browser with a focus on social media. It has features built in for just about every social media site you can think of. This browser is built on Mozilla, so as expected, there are also extensions available to expand it’s functionality even more.

Operating System: Windows, Mac OS X, Linux

Stainless

web browsers

Stainless has features you won’t find in Chrome or in any other browser. One example is parallel sessions, which allow you to log into a site using different credentials in separate tabs at the same time.

Operating System: Mac OS X

Cruz

web browsers

Cruz is a new social browser for Mac OS X with Twitter built-in. With Cruz you can view your Twitter Timeline and “@” Mentions in a split pane while browsing other sites. Cruz also allows you to open links from your Twitter Timeline in new tabs or browse multiple pages simultaneously in split views. Cruz has an open plug-in API for extending browser functionality.

Operating System: Mac OS X

Sunrise

web browsers

Sunrise is an open-source web browser based on WebKit. It’s designed to be easy to use by making frequently used features easily accessible. The main window of Sunrise has the browser, bookmarks, downloads, source codes and find bars.

Operating System: Mac OS X

SeaMonkey

web browsers

SeaMonkey aims to be an all-in-one internet application suite. So not only is it a web browser, but it also includes an email & newsgroup client with an included web feed reader, HTML editor, IRC chat and web development tools.

Operating System: Mac OS X, Windows, Linux

Lunascape

web browsers

Lunascape is the world’s first and only triple engine browser. So it’s three web browsing engines rolled into one: IE (Trident)+Firefox (Gecko)+Chrome・Safari (Webkit). It allows you to choose the right engine at the right time, realizing a dramatic decrease in web-browser compatibility issues, long loading times, and messed up websites display. Lunascape is also compatible with the expanding array of Firefox add-ons in addition to the already supported Internet Explorer add-ons.

Operating System: Windows

SlimBrowser

web browsers

SlimBrowser is a fast and secure tabbed web browser software fully loaded with powerful features. It saves you the burden of completing web forms with intelligent form filler.

Operating System: Windows

Midori

web browsers

Midori is a lightweight web browser built on WebKit. Some key features include: user scripts, styles support, and a customizable interface.

Operating System: Linux, Windows

Camino

web browsers

Camino is an open source web browser developed with a focus on providing the best possible experience for Mac OS X users. Some key features include: annoyance blocking, malware protection, and tab overview, which allows you to all of your open tabs at a glance.

Operating System: Mac OS X

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Henry Jones is a web developer, designer, and entrepreneur with over 14 years of experience. He is the founder of WDL and ThemeTrust.

30 Comments

      1. kevin Reply

        Opera is a one of best browser. But it’s not the fastest and lightweight.
        you can see it while you work on opera just go to processes
        ((Ctrl+Shift+Esc)->processes) and see how much memory it consumes. :O
        but still I’m using it 😀

  1. don dedondon Reply

    why should i try 12!!! webbrowser the world wasn’t waiting for? sorry, pointless and a waste of time ….

    1. Chase Mann Reply

      Flock is actually pretty cool since it concentrates on Social Media … hope you’re not so biased in all aspects of life … variety is the spice of it they say.

    1. Mark Reply

      Sorry… responding to my own question here. Chrome and other browsers can do parallel processing if you open separate accounts in private (incognito) windows.

  2. Dave Bowman Reply

    I’ll side with Don on this. You say we *should* try 12 obscure, almost unknown browsers, half of which share one rendering engine. But why should we bother? It’s just trivia knowledge.

    Guys, please don’t waste your time checking out the prehistorical stuff mentioned in the article, have a look at another modern browser «Opera» from opera.com, very fast, powerful, promising (they are already working towards supporting HTML5). It’s a shame few people in America know about it.

  3. Glen Reply

    Flock really doesn’t get the credit it deserves. It’s an excellent browser, and pulls some of the things we all use so regularly into a single window interface. That said, I still don’t use it… and there’s no good reason why.

    And I do agree with the above – Opera (10.4) is incredible. It’s leaps and bounds over what it used to be. I downloaded it for browser testing the other month, and was blown away by the fancy interface. Opera 10.5 unfortunately just doesn’t look as good *yet*, but it does perform brilliantly.

  4. Aubron Wood Reply

    I’ve been using jtcm for a while (www.ncssmconnected.com/jtcm), it uses PyQt to emulate the Dynamic Window Manager from linux in a web browser. Steep learning curve, but I’m sure loving it.

    1. Seelwa Reply

      Is a nice browser! But it has trouble opening the Gmail and other sites that require authentication. Has a solution?

    2. Seelwa Reply

      Sorry! I should have read better the documentation. Just run the applications listed in the file “installation.html” and the pages that require authentication open correctly. It’s a great work of Robert Peele.

  5. Icehawg Reply

    Lunascape is a buggy, resource-hogging, bloated piece of garbage.

    And Opera is actually still listed as a “major” browser, with Safari / Chrome / Firefox / IE, which is probably why it is not on this list of the “alternative” browsers.

    Odd that someone above calls Opera a “modern” browser when it is older then just about all 12 listed here (save Camino I think) and is older then 3 of the top 5 (Firefox/Safari/Chrome).

  6. Martin Reply

    There is Konqueror ( http://www.konqueror.org/ ) also. It’s part of KDE and runs on Linux, Windows, Mac OS and probably on some others as well. I don’t know how many people use it, many KDE users prefere Firefox or others. But one most if not all KDE-systems it ships as the default.
    I use Konqueror myself and really like it.

  7. Stefan Reply

    What the hell happened you just didn’t even _mention_ Opera? It’s the browser which invented tabbed browsing and other cool features like mouse getures that other browsers copy later. It’s available for windows, linux an mac. Its small, reliable, provides, link sync, newsreader, remote virtual server stuff (opera unite) and so on.

    Isn’t that worth a mention?

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