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Member since:
2005-07-06
Although it's true that Opera pioneered a lot of features, it seems to me that they're not on the cutting edge anymore. I would say Flock is the most innovative browser at the moment. It has built-in photo-sharing, Facebook, Twitter, blogging, RSS, and e-mail capabilities. I personally don't use Flock as I don't consider myself a heavy enough "social web" user, but for someone who is it's probably the best browser out there.
Firefox is the second most innovative, poised to become the most innovative. Behind the scenes, Mozilla is doing some *very* experimental, innovative stuff. Just take a look at Mozilla Labs:
http://mozillalabs.com/
Projects there include:
Ubiquity: Command-based shortcuts to speed up/automate common actions
Weave: Sync your browser profile across devices
Prism: Run web applications as desktop applications
Raindrop: A browser-based, universal messaging client (e-mail and IM) with a focus on intuitive simplicity and filtering personal e-mails from bulk e-mails
Snowl: RSS reader integrated into Firefox, with an emphasis on tracking online discussions
They also recently sponsored a competition for rethinking the design of tabbed browsing:
http://arstechnica.com/open-source/news/2009/07/mozilla-design-chal...
Their mobile browser also sports the most innovative mobile browser UI available:
http://blog.pavlov.net/2009/03/17/fennec-1-beta-1/
On top of all that, Firefox has more innovative, amazing extensions than all other browsers combined, and they're all free. A few examples:
Scrapbook: Save and organize web pages or entire websites for viewing offline
Zotero: Save, organize and annotate web pages; specially targeted for use in research papers, with amazing support for citations.
Firebug: Invaluable tool for web developers, lets you view the structure of and modify elements of web pages dynamically
Adblock: Block ads
Sage: Very nice RSS reader
Meebo: Built-in universal instant messenger
...are just a few of the top ones off the top of my head. And that's just the tip of the iceberg.
As for Chrome, it's fast and does a lot to help web developers, but you're right, its UI is hardly innovative.
Edited 2009-11-24 12:45 UTC