It's been a while now, several years, since I surrended to Chrome's taking over the world, and just ... started using it exclusively. (in personal life).
It manages all my passwords beautifully, it manages numerous other "form filling" situations (name, addresses, which I can edit or store)--and it's
very good at recognizing those scenarios on a webpage, unlike other browsers), it stores any payment information that I wish it to, it synchs with devices anywhere I am in the world, complete with 100% of my settings and personalizations, and it (obviously) it tightly integrated with all other things Google, thus it tends to work well with all Androids (i.e. Google), as well as all Google products (Photos sharing, Docs sharing and probably 100 other products I don't even know about yet). If privacy is an issue, Chrome does have the Incognito mode. I never use it, though - I
want Chrome to know who I am.
On top of all that, Google seems to have extremely sophisticated ways of knowing when a suspicious login is taking place. Despite many of my passwords having been compromised over the years (like anyone) - Yet, my Google account has
never been hacked to my knowledge. They have JUST the right balance of making it easy enough for ME to log in, but hard for anyone else.
Having your browser history at your fingertips no matter what device you are or where you are is ... priceless, and very convenient.
Remind me - why do people still use Firefox and other browsers? I'm not being sarcastic, I'm sure there are good reasons ... What are they to you? I think
@Steve R. does alot with it too, so am curious.
Is the primary reason that's left to use non-Chromium browsers essentially just privacy & anonymity concerns?