Firefox dies? This Linux replaces it with another browser

Firefox has always been the favorite web browser for users who are committed to free software and privacy. However, for months, Mozilla has only lost followers who, little by little, are migrating to both Chrome and Edge, the two most used browsers today. Although it is not the most used web browser within Windows, the orange fox has always been an icon in Linux distributions. However, this may be over very soon.

What a web browser needs to be successful is to have great allies. Chrome, for example, appears on the main page of the Google search engine, so we will forcefully end up installing it. Edge comes by default in Windows 10, with banners that call us to try it. Safari the same on macOS. But what about alternative browsers, like Vivaldi?

Firefox dies? This Linux replaces it with another browser

Manjaro Linux bets on Vivaldi

Vivaldi is the Chromium-based web browser created by the original creators of Opera. It is not the most used web browser (not even one of the three most used), and it is not the most popular either. However, more and more users are betting on it looking for extra privacy and features that are not available in other browsers.

Vivaldi has always been in the official Manjaro repositories (like many other distributions) so that any user could install it. However, the default browser was still Firefox, until now.

A few hours ago, those responsible for Manjaro Linux (one of the most popular and easy-to-use Arch-based distros) announced that, in their Cinnamon edition (for now) they are going to change the default web browser from Firefox to this Vivaldi. Those responsible for Manjaro and Vivaldi have been working together to adapt the browser interface to this distro and optimize it to the maximum to be at the height of the distribution.

Acceso a Vivaldi en Manjaro

It’s certainly a big change that will only hurt Mozilla. It is true that the Cinnamon edition is not as popular as the GNOME, KDE or XFCE based editions. But it is an opportunity to test and probably in the future this change will reach all other users.

If you don’t like Vivaldi, of course nobody forces you to install it. Firefox will continue to be in the official repositories to download, install and update it like any other program.

What is happening with Firefox?

This we ask ourselves. We cannot deny that Mozilla is working very hard on the browser, adding new improvements and functions to remain a modern browser. The interface, another of the most important elements, is evolving towards a very modern interface, in the purest Windows 11 style. But, despite this, users continue to flee the browser en masse.

The reason? It is not known. Probably the dominant presence of the other browsers makes Firefox in the shadows and not visible. For now, it maintains its market share thanks to the fact that it is a browser that respects privacy. But he is not the only one who has bet on privacy (Vivaldi, for example, does too). And as Linux loses, it doesn’t bode well for Mozilla’s browser.

If you want to try the new Manjaro Linux with Vivaldi, you can download the latest version from this link .