![]() With a look and feel very similar to Safari and Firefox, almost anyone will find it easy to work with in seconds I found myself completely at home with Camino from the second I launched it. But as we all know, sometimes you have to step outside of the tried and true in order to find something really great.Ĭheck these browsers out - one of them may work for you.Ĭamino 1.6.4 Camino, an open source browser based on Mozilla's Gecko rendering engine, is clearly designed to be a simple, easy-to-use, yet fully functional browser. It's possible that none of these will do what you need better than the browser you're already using. Finally, Shiira has an interface that is more Mac than Apple's own Safari. OmniWeb offers speed and an interesting approach to tabbing (but, at a base price of $14.95, is the only browser in this roundup that isn't free), while Opera brings with it a number of features it has pioneered over the years, along with a strong fan base. Which is the best? It all depends on what you need from a browser.įor example, Camino is for those who want a simple, basic browser, while Maxthon is overflowing with every power feature in the book. They chose six candidates: Camino (for the Mac), Maxthon (for the PC), OmniWeb (for the Mac), Opera (both the Mac and the PC versions), and Shiira (for the Mac). We asked three of our writers to take some lesser-known browsers out for a spin and see how they do. In fact, with the exception of Google's Chrome (which made a big splash, mostly because it came from Google), most of the alternative browsers out there tend to get lost in the shuffle.Īnd it's too bad, because some of these relatively unknown browsers are good - and could be better for some users than the ones they're using now. Even when your browser has long forgotten where you've been, HistoryHound will remember.When Microsoft, Mozilla, or Apple comes out with a new version of Internet Explorer, Firefox, or Safari, it makes news - mainly because most of us use one or more of these three Web browsers. You can tell HistoryHound to keep as many days of your web browsing history as you like. Follow your tracks for as long as you want.Search for any or all of your search terms, use a boolean search, or take advantage of the include/exclude notation to quickly find what you want. Pick a search method that works for you.You just type and it finds what you're looking for. It's almost as easy as shouting "Go get it boy!" A quick press of command-option-space (or any other key combination you choose) brings HistoryHound to the front and selects the search field. Assign a hot key to quickly call HistoryHound into action.You can use it as a normal window,Ĭonfigure it to float above everything else, or to hide itself when HistoryHound You don't need fancy previews or sorting by name and by relevance, use Choose the full search window, or an unobtrusive search palette.You want - Safari, Firefox, Chrome, Edge, Brave, OmniWeb, Vivaldi, Opera, NetNewsWire or Orion - HistoryHound will track down the pages no matter where you saw them! Will search for pages you've visited in any of them. Major macOS web browsers, and if you use more than one browser, HistoryHound HistoryHound fits the way you work by offering you a number of options: A number of different options make HistoryHound convenientĪnd fast to use, and the fully-functional demo runs for 30 days with no limitations. The same engine that's inside Safari, so your search results are rendered quicklyĪnd accurately. It also includes a built-in browser based on WebKit, Scans your browser's cache, history, and bookmarks periodically to keep its Powered by macOS' Spotlight search technology for fast searching, HistoryHound HistoryHound will chase down the page for you - fast! Using at the time? Or perhaps you've got your bookmarks meticulously organized,īut it takes forever to mouse through the menus to get to something you want? ![]() Have you ever tried to find something in your browser history or bookmarks, butĬouldn't quite remember when or where you saw it, or which browser you were Gives you a list of pages you've viewed recently, ranked by relevance. It's a "personal web search." Just type in a few keywords and HistoryHound HistoryHound lets you do a fast keyword search on the entire content ofĪll web pages and RSS feeds you've visited recently, plus all those that you'veīookmarked. ![]() Find pages in your Bookmarks or History just by
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