Windows Browsers Apps
Volume Master v2023
Avant Browser v2019 Build 2
Chromium v148.0.7778.168
Yandex Browser v26.4.1.1026
SRWare Iron v74.0.3850.0
Firefox (Quantum) v67.0 Developer Edition Beta 1 (Quantum)
Google Translate for PC v2022
SlimBrowser v18.0.0.0
Cyberfox v2021
Pale Moon v34.2.2
Internet Explorer v2022
Epic Browser v2022
Comodo Dragon v72.0.3626.121
Opera One v2024
NoScript for Firefox v10.2.0
Polarity v2024
Zen Browser v1.19.13b
Opera Air v2025
SeaMonkey v2.53.23
ChromeDriver v2024
YourPorn v2025
AVG Secure Browser v2025
Sleipnir v6.2.14
Google Chrome 76 v76.0.3795.4 Dev
About Browsers
The web browser is, for most people, the program they spend the most time in, which makes the choice worth a little thought. Under the surface, most browsers are built on one of a small number of engines. The majority share the Chromium engine, while Firefox uses its own. That shared foundation is why so many browsers feel similar and run the same extensions.
What separates them is the layer on top: the interface, the default privacy settings, the bundled features, and the organization behind the project. Some browsers strip tracking aggressively by default. Some build in tab management, note tools, or split-screen views. Some are tuned for low memory use on weaker machines.
Privacy is the area where defaults matter most, because few people change them. Browsers vary in how much they block trackers out of the box and in how much data they send back to their maker. It is reasonable to check those settings after installing, whichever browser you pick, rather than assuming the defaults match your preference.
Resource use is the other practical factor. Browsers are demanding programs, and many open tabs consume real memory regardless of the brand. On an older computer, a lighter browser and a habit of closing unused tabs help more than any single setting. Extensions add capability but also weight, so a short, deliberate list beats a long one.























