> Basically, if we accept the notion that it's hard for someone to switch from Chrome to Firefox we accept the notion that it's hard to move anyone from any ecosystem just on the grounds of them not wanting to touch their muscle memory even a bit. You get to the same option in three to four clicks through different menues. Is it that hard?
As an emacs user in large part to avoid this, yes it us that hard.
It pains me to say that though since I want people to switch to Firefox so it can win against these spyware-laden browsers.
We are all creatures of habit. Even if something is not good in our current experience we often say "yeah, it's bad, but it's a bad I know. Who knows what will be bad in the other software?" - which shows the incredible high threshold this shitty decision by Google has reached for people to seriously consider going back to Firefox (seriously, as in "I've seen more posts about switching (back) to Firefox than in the last 2 or 3 years together")
As an emacs user in large part to avoid this, yes it us that hard.
It pains me to say that though since I want people to switch to Firefox so it can win against these spyware-laden browsers.