Posts in Technology
Turns Out, Chrome is Still Terrible

Image curtesy of Cocktails & Coffee.

This is nothing new, and has been documented. But here's my story.

I recently had to download Google Chrome for something I was working on. Occasionally, you get that edge-case website that won't work well on Safari or another browser, and you have to download the Internet Explorer of 2023.

I work on a Mac, and Chrome has never been great with battery life on the Mac. Let me rephrase that: Chrome has always been atrocious with battery life on the Mac. And it had been years since I opened it on a desktop.

I was greeted by the slim styling of the tabs, the plugins requesting access. I've always liked the design of Chrome, I just don't like the designers.

I poked through the Settings for a second, and to my surprise, there was a battery saver feature. I thought to myself, "Maybe this time will be different."

So I gave it the old college try for 3 days.

Browsing was smooth and fast, plugins and extensions worked after updating. But it still looked like it was sucking down my battery faster than it should.

I left my laptop overnight, unplugged, on my kitchen table, with the lid closed but Chrome still running. I had 84% battery when I closed the lid. 14 hours later when I opened it, I got a low battery warning - 10%.

I have a two year old M1 Pro Macbook Pro. It hardly ever gives me a low battery warning. I can edit on Final Cut Pro 4K footage for several hours before it does. I can surf on Safari all day. I can write in Obsidian with the wi-fi off for 12 hours straight and not get a low battery warning. I also didn't have anything else open besides Mimestream (email app), and Obsidian (notes app).

Chrome sucked 70% of my battery in 14 hours, with the screen off and the computer in standby. Why?

I was running the most recent version. I was also only running 3 extensions, not 30.

I could go through all the reasons why it did this, from RAM usage to using too much CPU, even when the Mac was in standby. But the base reason is just the fact that Chrome is still not a well-written app for the Mac. And it probably never will be.

My advice: don't use Chrome, especially on the Mac. Privacy concerns aside, it kills your batter by using too much power that it doesn't need and the developers in Mountain View don't think it's important enough to rewrite it.

So use Safari. Or Arc. Or Firefox. Or anything else. Just don't use Chrome.

What Mac Should You Buy?

The all-new M2 Macbook Air.

Mac Buying Guide • Fall 2022

Around this time of year, I usually get a lot of calls and texts with that very question - “What Mac should I buy?”

It’s gotten a little more confusing as of late because of the range of Apple’s new M1 (and now M2) chips and the variety of machines you can buy now. That’s good, but it makes it more confusing for the non-nerd. So being a nerd, I’m here to help.

First off, do not buy the old-style 13-inch Macbook Pro, still with the TouchBar. Yes, it has an M2 and active cooling, but you can get so much more for less. No one should buy this computer in my opinion.

Again, these all all my opinions, but I talk to lots of people, young and old, every year and advise them on buying new computers or iPads.

If you are a student, in high school or especially college, most students (about 90% of you) should be able to get by with the brand-new M2 MacBook Air. This laptop has a new slim design, new colors, and is powerful enough for almost every task you can throw at it. If you’re not a design student using Photoshop and InDesign and Final Cut Pro and other intensive applications, you should be good with the baseline M2 MacBook Air. You always want to get as much RAM and storage as you can afford (you will see that theme in this article), but 99% of you should be able to get by with 16GB and 1TB of storage. The only problem with the M2 Air is that it’s brand new and you might not get one until September.

If you are a design/film student, meaning you will be using applications like Photoshop and Final Cut Pro on the regular, you should be able to get by with the M2 MacBook Air. But if you are editing 4K or 8K video, working with huge layout or photo files, you’ll need to at least bump up to the 14-inch MacBook Pro with an M1 Pro chip. The M1 Pro chip puts you on a whole other level with these applications and workflows. Your render and export times will be cut in half, your computer will stay much cooler because the MacBook Pro has active cooling (meaning: a fan) where the M2 Air does not. I do a lot of video editing and compression and design work, and I have the base-model M1 Pro MacBook Pro. It’s been wonderful so far, and fast enough for all my workflows.

If you’re a business professional, and you work in an industry such as networking, IT, ministry or youth ministry, accounting, teaching, marketing, or any categories like that, you can probably make it just fine with a 14- or 16-inch MacBook Pro with M1 Pro chip. If the MB Pro is out of your price range, get a mid-range M2 MacBook Air. It will still do what you need for less price, albeit a little slower.

If you are a design professional, the least you would need in my opinion is the MacBook Pro with M1 Pro chip. But you might want to upgrade to the M1 Max chip. The power you get from the Max chip is unreal. It can carve through 8K video and huge Photoshop files like butter. And if you don’t need something portable because you’re always working at your desk, seriously consider a Mac Studio with M1 Max, or if you have the budget and need the power an M1 Ultra. My nerd side wants all the power all the time, and I’ve been tempted by the Mac Studio, but I need something portable. If you’re a design pro and want a great big 4K or 5K screen and a lot of power, give a serious look to the Mac Studio with M1 Max or Ultra. Most can get by with the M1 Max unless you are rendering 2-hour 8K videos or something.

If you don’t fall into any of the categories I’ve named off so far, you need not consider yourself a power user. That’s okay! That means you get to spend less money and frankly, you have more choice. If you want a nice 4K screen with a slim profile, you like colors, and you don’t need a laptop for portability, get the M1 iMac. It’s an all-in-one desktop that’s perfect for Youtube-watching, photo editing, and web surfing. You can edit HD and 4K videos and big photos on it too if you want. Plus it’s available in many colors.

When buying a computer, here’s a few things you shouldn’t do:

  • Don’’t buy the cheapest model you can. Always look to get a mid-range model. Don’t know what I mean by that? I mean don’t get the smallest storage and smallest bit of RAM (also called Memory). At least get something mid-range, because it’s likely you can’t upgrade these machines. At the very least, upgrade the storage (also called SSD or Hard Drive). The lowest storage option is usually the slowest storage - and yes, slow drive speeds can slow down your computer after a while.
  • Don’t buy direct from Apple unless you want something that’s just come out. Amazon and Best Buy are always running sales on year-old devices and computers. Again, if it’s been out for more than six months, you’ll probably be able to find a deal on it, and Apple’s same warranty applies no matter who you buy it from.

I hope this guide has been helpful! If you have additional questions, you can find me on Twitter or email me directly.

I'm Loving the Vivaldi Browser
My Vivaldi tab bar.

My Vivaldi tab bar.

I have a love/hate relationship with Safari on the Mac. I absolutely refuse to use Chrome for a number of reasons (data privacy, battery consumption, etc.). But I love Chrome's simple design and extensions. Firefox is fast and light, but I don't like the design. Opera is cool, Opera GX is even cooler. Brave is also neat but again, I didn't like its design.

A few weeks ago I came across this video by the YouTube channel A Better Computer where he talked about the Vivaldi browswer. And ever since downloading and trying it, I've been really happy with it.

Vivaldi is (to the best of my knowledge) built on Chromium, the same as Google Chrome. You can even run web extenstions from the Chrome Store, which is sweet. 1Password is the extension I use the most, and it works great most of the time.

What I really like about Vivaldi is the way that you can make it look the way you want. You can style any color. You can give your tabs that rounded look like Chrome (something I was really looking for, honestly - don't know why it's so important to me).

Vivaldi has seemed fast and light, like a browser should be. Every site I've tried has worked so far, unlike Safari (really, Apple? After all this time?).

There are a lot of browsers to choose from, and you're probably set on the one you use, but if you're frustrated every other day with your current browser, download Vivaldi and give it a try.