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Camino Browser For Mac

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  1. Camino is a web browser optimized for Mac OS X with a Cocoa user interface and powerful Gecko layout engine. It's the simple, secure, and fast browser for Mac OS X. It practices the art of simplicity with an uncluttered user interface but with the features you expect from a modern browser like tabbed browsing and pop-up blocking settings.
  2. Mac 'Camino' Web Browser Gets Put Out to Pasture. After ten years' existence, Camino developers admit that they just can't keep the browser current for today's users.
  3. That browser is Camino. Camino makes your web experience more productive, more efficient, more secure, and more fun. It looks and feels like a Mac OS X application should because it was designed exclusively for Mac OS X and the high standards set by its users.

Camino Editor's Review

'Camino' is a Web browser that combines two flavors: Mac OS X and Mozilla.

Lcdtest for mac. A new and emerging browser for Mac, Brave is secure, private and fast. Brave is open source and focuses on your privacy. Brave is a lightweight Mac browser. Features of Brave: It is 8 times faster than regular browsers. It blocks ads, trackers, and unwanted content so you don't have to deal with them. I am using all these browsers on a ten-year-old 500 MHz Titanium PowerBook G4 running Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard. (Camino also supports OS X 10.4 Tiger.) At 46.6 MB, Camino 2.0.7 is quite small compared to Firefox 3.6.16 at 52.8 MB, TenFourFox 4.0 at 54.7, and Safari 5.0.5 at a massive 114.7 MB.

This browser uses the same engine that is implemented in the FireFox browser. This browser is a true Mozilla product. The result of the Acid2 test confirms that too.
This browser is a fast implementation of the Mozilla engine, Gecko. I am referring to the possibility to start this browser very quickly and to the Webpage's fast rendering speed. This is one of the fastest browsers for Mac OS X.
Most of the fast browsers that I tested on this Mac had issues. Some of them were poor implementations of the Apple engine and some weren't ergonomic at all. This browser has an efficient and highly customizable interface.
I was disappointed, when I found out that Camino doesn't have a session saving functionality. However, since Google is my friend, I found that there is a CaminoSession program, which enables that kind of functionality in Camino.
This browser doesn't have some features that Firefox does. Camino doesn't have the extension support, it doesn't support search plug-in, and it doesn't have an auto-completion feature for the text boxes on the Web pages that you visit.
However, you can find features like pop-up blocking. The notification is not very intuitive, so you have to be careful when you need to enable a requested pop-up.
Camino

The 'Preferences' panel is quite simple. It just gives you the minimal set of options that you need to customize the behavior of this browser. If you used Firefox before, configuring this panel won't be an issue at all.

Chrome Browser For Mac Download

Pluses: It's fast. It uses low resources. It's ergonomic and it's highly customizable.

Google Chrome Browser For Mac


Drawbacks / flaws: It doesn't have a session saving functionality, by default. It doesn't have a good auto-completion feature. Opening links that target into a new window open a new window of the browser, instead of just opening a new tab inside the browsing window that you currently use.
In conclusion: If you want a really fast browser and you can live without some features that you can find in Firefox, Opera, or OmniWeb, then Camino is a good option. It also provides a good user interface unlike other Mozilla products. Well, SeaMonkey, a Mozilla product, is a browser that isn't that customizable.
version reviewed: 1.0.3

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The search for the best browser is never-ending. Whenever i think I've found the be-all-and-end-all of browsers, another one eventually comes out that trumps it. If you use a Mac, Camino could be a great browser for you, I know I love it.Once you realize that Safari is essentially the Internet Explorer of OS X, you start to download alternative browsers. Being a web developer, I have all the major browsers on my system: Safari, Chrome, Firefox and Opera, plus Camino. Google Chrome is still the flagship browser—the ultimate easy-to-use, feature-rich and customisable experience—but it's the opposite of lightweight, and tends to bog down my computer if I leave it running with too many tabs open for too long.

Therefore, for a lot of my browsing, I've always used Firefox and Opera. Opera is the lightest, but lacks some support for CSS3 and HTML5,

while Firefox is still very lightweight compared to Chrome, but tends to freeze from time to time. Now, introducing: Camino. Camino started as a fork of Firefox 3 to be developed specifically with the Macintosh operating system in mind.

Camino is beyond doubt the lightest and fastest web browser I've ever used. Unfortunately it lacks some essential features (like Mozilla add-ons) so it doesn't completely replace other browsers, but with features like autocomplete, keychain access, tab overview, an incredibly useful download window and the most recent Gecko rendering engine, it comes pretty damn close. For casual browsing, checking e-mails/Facebook and other general purposes it is perfect. It reacts instantly to all my commands, and has never crashed on me once.

I highly recommend that all Mac users, especially if you have one on the lower end of processors speeds, at least try out Camino. You can download the disc image from their website at http://caminobrowser.org/download/releases/2.1.2/

About Jeremy Andrews

Freelance PHP/MySQL developer, tech support guy, travel agent, transit photographer, and lover of poutine. Jeremy Andrews is a young guy from Montreal, Canada who enjoys writing about technology, can develop a website, and can do your travel arrangements! Contact him today at jeremy@jerail.ca for more info on any of these services.





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