

- #DOWNLOAD BRAVE BROWSER OFFLINE INSTALLER WINDOWS 10#
- #DOWNLOAD BRAVE BROWSER OFFLINE INSTALLER PORTABLE#
- #DOWNLOAD BRAVE BROWSER OFFLINE INSTALLER ANDROID#
- #DOWNLOAD BRAVE BROWSER OFFLINE INSTALLER PASSWORD#
#DOWNLOAD BRAVE BROWSER OFFLINE INSTALLER PORTABLE#
The worst part is that, like other Chrome browsers, Brave as a portable browser would lose all your passwords as you move PCs. As Brave has no extension support, that point is a bit moot. Brave loses all your passwords as you move PCs and is no faster than Chrome, Opera, etc. Brave's entire speed claim is due to adblocking, which everyone can have in their favorite browser and get the exact same 50%-ish speed boost to ad-heavy page browsing. This was confirmed by independent testing in unbiased reviews of Brave. Brave is no faster than Chrome, Chromium, Opera, etc when those browsers have uBlock Origin installed.

#DOWNLOAD BRAVE BROWSER OFFLINE INSTALLER PASSWORD#
This is due to the fact that Chrome et al encrypt the passwords within the password store per PC.Īs to speed, my original point stands. As with Opera and Chrome, the username was still there but the password was removed. I moved the Brave data from AppData\Local and AppData\Roaming from the old machine to the new one.
#DOWNLOAD BRAVE BROWSER OFFLINE INSTALLER WINDOWS 10#
I then installed Brave on a Windows 10 machine under the same username (so the same C:\Users\Username\. I saved a single login/password then closed brave. Unlike Chrome/Chromium/Opera, Brave has no extension support, so there's nothing to test there.įor passwords, I installed Brave on a Windows 7 machine as a clean install. Chrome trashed the extension and extension data. Opera preserved the extension and single note saved. The saved password was lost within both Opera and Chrome. I then moved this to a Windows 10 machine. On moving paths on the same machine, both Opera and Chrome preserved passwords, extensions, and extension data. Installed a single note taking extension in each with a single note. I just setup the current releases of Opera Portable and Chrome Portable as clean installs on a Windows 7 machine. You are dumping on it so much it seems like a personal vendetta. It's a fantastic browser and it has a modern approach. I would never have known it was beta if it didn't tell me. Come to think of it their Linux version is a bit different from their MS version. It doesn't look or behave the same as their Microsoft version.
#DOWNLOAD BRAVE BROWSER OFFLINE INSTALLER ANDROID#
With Firefox on Android version there is a lot be desired.

The Android version is just like the Microsoft and Linux version. It runs on Android, Linux, Microsoft and Mac. It is beta but never-less it hasn't crashed or stalled on my computers. Using a simple process monitor such as task manager you can see that Brave uses less resources than Firefox or Chromium even when it has more windows open and even when those windows have multi media content on them. I didn't do a test but it is so markedly different I didn't bother. Brave is faster than Firefox or Chromium. Passwords are not locked to a single computer and extensions do not get lost. You said: "Passwords are locked to a single PC, extensions routinely get lost" So I put Chromium and just for kicks Opera on a USB stick and tried them on three different computers. As of 2016, it is currently in version 0.8, and is in beta testing for iOS, Android, Windows, OS X, and Linux. Brave intends to keep 15% of ad revenue for itself, pay content publishers 55%, ad partners 15% and also give 15% to the browser users, who can in turn donate to bloggers and other providers of web content through micropayments. The browser also strives to improve online privacy by sharing less data with advertising customers, instead targeting web ads through analysis of users' anonymized browsing history. It aims to block website trackers and remove intrusive internet advertisements, replacing them with ads sold by Eich's company. License: Mozilla Public License Version 2.0 (Same as Firefox, which does have a portable version here.)īrave is an open source web browser, announced by the co-founder of the Mozilla Project, Brendan Eich.
