
AVAST SECURE BROWSER VS AVAST BROWSER EXTENSION WINDOWS 10
Probably overreacting, but this was a big red flag for me considering how invasive big name software brands have been lately (COUGH COUGH WINDOWS 10 COUGH COUGH COUGH) Pins itself to your taskbar and start menu even if you tell it "No thanks, ask me later" when it runs the first time preferences menu.Dev console seems to work just as well (and the exact same) as it did in Chrome, which leads me to believe this is a modification of Chrome rather than a new browser.Sadly did not seem to copy over my Google Chrome theme, despite importing everything else.Seems to block some ads that Adblock Plus, Adblock, and Ublock Origins all seem to miss, but fails to block some ads that they all catch and block.Video downloader seems to work really well.Imported all my bookmarks from Chrome just fine.I've only been using it a short while, and its running with no extensions compared to my Chrome, but I loaded up one of my favorite sites that is more notorious for being slow and it seemed to load faster It does seem faster than Chrome so far.Want to learn more about how Avast can keep you safe? Take a look at our Avast Antivirus solutions review.Here's what I've seen in my short time trying the browser: It’s also nice to have a browser that syncs across devices, as many users will be hopping between their desktop and mobile throughout the day or week. And with its own Addons store and access to the Chrome extensions store, you can add any functionality you’re missing out of the box. While Avast’s features are limited, they do make sense – changing your theme for better visibility and grouping tabs are both valuable options. If you’re visiting a lot of sites per day, this makes a big difference in time, and it strains your brain less because there’s not as much to pay attention to or work around. Pages load fast, and you don’t have to wait mid-read for an ad to pop up. Final verdictįor the daily internet user who may head online to shop or work, the most powerful and noticeable feature is the ad-blocker. The Anti-Fingerprint and Anti-Phishing features we talked about above are good examples of this. In terms of its privacy settings, Avast has a lot covered that other browsers don’t. However, tweaking settings for the browsers may show different results, and the score gap wasn’t vast to begin with, so you could argue that they’re all roughly the same speed-wise. The competitionĪvast feels faster than other browsers when ad-blocking is enabled, and in our testing using Speed Battle, it did perform a bit faster than Chrome, Firefox, and Safari. On mobile, you can turn on the ad and tracker blocking feature, and there are a number of mobile-specific security features you can turn on or off. And if there’s some reason why you don’t want your info synced, you don’t have to enable it, and you can use Avast on your devices independently. The Avast browser is available for Android, iOS, Mac, and Windows.īrowser data can be synced across all of your devices so that you can move between them freely without missing out on things like bookmarks and history. It also made for a cleaner appearance, closer to reading mode than a regular ad-filled page. When set to Strict, web pages loaded super-fast on Avast, and scrolling to read an article was more enjoyable, too, because there weren’t ads auto-populating along the way.

The ad-blocker worked really well for us. Clicking the grayed-out Shield icon on the top-right of the browser lets you pause and unpause ad-blocking via a pop-up. If you have ad-block enabled on Avast, you can temporarily turn it off when you’re on a site where you may want to see ads. Clicking on the grey shield in the top right of a browser window lets you pause or unpause Avast's ad blocker (Image credit: Avast)
