Your browser is more than just another app—it's your gateway to the web. We break down the strengths and weaknesses of today's top browsers to help you find the best fit for your needs.
Firefox 151.0.2 fixes Split View bugs, Windows crashes, caching problems, and several website rendering issues.
Updates for the web browsers Chrome and Firefox, as well as the Thunderbird email client, patch partly critical security ...
A screen displays the logo of the open-source web browser Firefox on July 31, 2009, in London, as the software edges towards it's billionth download within the next twenty four hours. First released ...
When it comes to modern browsers, Chrome is the undisputed king, with Firefox falling to a distant fourth in the rankings. To make matters worse, other popular browsers like Edge and Opera also use ...
Apple has released iOS 26.4.2 with unspecified bug fixes and a single security patch, while Mozilla’s Firefox 150 adds PDF editing tools, improved split view, and addresses 41 security vulnerabilities ...
PCWorld reports that Firefox 150 transforms its PDF viewer into a comprehensive editor, allowing users to reorder pages, copy images, and perform various editing functions. Mozilla addressed 41 ...
Anthropic, in collaboration with Mozilla, identified 22 security flaws in the Firefox browser during a two-week test, with 14 of the vulnerabilities classified as serious. The discoveries were made ...
Firefox on Windows trails Chrome on BrowserBench.org' s JetStream and Speedometer tests, though it wins on Principled Technologies' WebXPRT benchmark. All of these tests use JavaScript to simulate ...
High-severity flaws were patched in Chrome’s WebGPU and Video components, and in Firefox’s Graphics and JavaScript Engine components. Google promoted Chrome 141 to the stable channel with 21 security ...
Kaspersky recently uncovered a zero-day vulnerability in Google Chrome Mozilla now says it has found a similar issue in Firefox The bug was used to target Russian targets in a cyber-espionage campaign ...
The no-click exploit launched in October infected computers in Europe and North America with the RomCom backdoor when victims were redirected through attacker-controlled websites. A Russia-aligned ...