• 0 Posts
  • 8 Comments
Joined 11 months ago
cake
Cake day: January 31st, 2024

help-circle


  • I would never use it as a personal browser, mostly because I really only keep 2-5 tabs open at a time for personal stuff. However, Arc has been an absolute game changer for work. Just a couple of reasons:

    • The way it blend tabs and favorites prevents you from accidentally having multiple tabs of the same site open (though you still can have multiple when you want)
    • Workspaces have very little friction to them, and you can control whether they are sandboxed or not, which helps greatly manage my “hats” at work
    • Lots of smart keyboard shortcut options make zipping through common tasks a breeze
    • Their “Tidy Tabs” button uses an LLM to group similar tabs together, which is a lifesaver during big research sessions

    I hope their monitization plans succeed, because I’d hate to see this browser die.





  • arf@lemmy.todaytoTechnology@lemmy.world*Permanently Deleted*
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    33
    arrow-down
    10
    ·
    8 months ago

    Anyone could just as easily say:

    Windows does not compete with macOS as a desktop operating system and I doubt it ever will. It simply does not offer the compatibility and ease of use (including for power users) that macOS - for all its faults - has.

    Windows isn’t compatible with Final Cut Pro, has a lackluster implementation of Adobe Photoshop comparatively, and has no support for common cli shells such as bash or zsh (without creating an emulated subsystem ala Cygwin or WSL). Setting up a Windows desktop for my day-to-day tasks is a huge pain as opposed to macOS or a Linux-based desktop OS.