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[–] belphegorsprime ago 

They also kind of shat on command line browsers. I get that they are not for everyone, but they can be useful to some. They definitely don't deserve to be at the bottom of the list. I will have to take a look at waterfox and icecat. I've been playing with Brave, but I'm not happy with the tab styling. They waste too much screen real-estate. That is one thing that chromium got right.

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[–] TheTrigger ago 

I get that they are not for everyone, but they can be useful to some

You have no idea how many times lynx/links2 has saved me from having to do a reinstall, because I somehow managed to screw up X and/or display drivers on it. One of the first things that I make sure is installed, on any linux computer that I use, is a command-line browser. :p

I use Icecat on linux and Waterfox on Windows, tbh. Although I might ditch Icecat all-together. It breaks too many websites, in a non-fixable way. With uBlock, Secret Agent, and NoScript on Waterfox— you get the same security anyways, and can easily whitelist websites on a case-by-case basis.

Also, I don't know if you've used a 64-bit Firefox-variant before, but oh boy are they fast; especially this one.

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[–] belphegorsprime ago 

Hahahah this made me laugh. Sadly, I have reinstalled for similar reasons in the past, before I become more comfortable on the command line. I've mostly messed around with w3m, and you are right, sometimes it can save you from disaster (though these days I usually have an extra device around like a smartphone to look up what I did wrong in one of my config files). I only laugh because I understand the pain.

I will have to try out waterfox. I'm due for a browser change. I remember when chromium wasn't bloatware.