![Ww2 tank battles on youtube](https://loka.nahovitsyn.com/14.jpg)
![slimboat slimjet slimboat slimjet](https://www.softwarebee.com/screenshot/slimboat-web-browser-for-windows-portable-version-51676.jpg)
![slimboat slimjet slimboat slimjet](https://malwaretips.com/data/avatars/l/10/10239.jpg)
(6) You don't want to customize the same web pages over and over again, an aggravation of you plan to return there often. You can't change the color on the server side, but there is no reason the HTML document, once received, can't be customized a bit before being displayed. You might need the ability to refill the background to a different color to make the foreground stand out better. (5) Some HTML documents paint their own backgrounds, or the web developer made poor choices and the letters are hard to read against the background. Technically, an image could be painted there, or a textured background, but anything rather than a harsh, bright white. If the document is too small to fully occupy the screen, the chosen background fills in the blank areas. It's a matter of painting the background first, then painting the objects in the HTML document over it. You might like something a little bit easier on the eyes. Right now the only choice is bright white. (4) Ability to designate a default background for use with HTML documents. Saves you from remembering to get back there and check for any possible replies, from having to just bookmark the link there, and from having to remember to do it from time to time. (3) Ability to do something very similar, but with forums, selected threads, and and any added posts. Webmail servers let you access store messages via an HTML document that it creates on the fly for the purpose, so it does not abide by the POP3/IMAP and SMTP protocols. IMAP email account act much this way, but they go through email servers on the other end. Why not the best of both worlds combined? At least let you know when there is new mail present by checking periodically on its own. Then it's up to you to respond there rather than bring it down onto your PC. Webmail servers don't deliver the mail, they wait for you to come to them, and you read it on your screen.
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(2) Ability to check, and if desired/warranted, download emails from webmail servers. Right now the best way to do this is to set up a profile per browser, and go to that browser when you want to engage that profile. (1) Ability to set up profiles that allow multiple users per browser, or one user to have different profiles for different purposes. But I can suggest three areas where I would like to see effort made: Now the Chromium Project is likely to inspire more competition and more browsers going forward, and quite frankly, they've really have to work at it to make any that equal these. The others slide down a notch as a result. But once pass that hurdle, it showed is was as good as Chronium in action and almost the equal of Slimjet in handling a large number of open tabs.
![slimboat slimjet slimboat slimjet](http://www.slimjetbrowser.com/images/windows.png)
It is difficult to input and organize bookmarks from another browser, so I was not that pleased with it. It's not really in the competition, but worth the mention.Ĭompeting for last place was the following browser. Number five was good, but has been superceded by Slimjet. This one will surprise you, because for many, it is their prime or only choice: Number four was low rated because it's just not as good for what I do as the others are. Odd behavior, and means I have to use a different browser when I get involved in that manner. But it is unable to complete some of the actions onscreen when I click on a moving sprite. The third one is almost the equal of Chromium. But it just got superceded, and I will name the replacement last. The next one is almost as good, but it crashes a lot when I try to open as many tabs as I can open under Slimjet. That is, I don't want video playback, so disable Flash, I need good response from the mouse and keyboard to keep up with screen action, I need a large number of tags opened at once, and I simply don't get all this with each and every browser. I haven't used them all, and the ones I have used have quirks that show up under what you might think of as atypical or unusual circumstances. I thought this might be worth passing on in the debate about web browsers.
![Ww2 tank battles on youtube](https://loka.nahovitsyn.com/14.jpg)