One of the BEST Android Browsers: Habit Browser

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DJBrie

Senior Member
Mar 17, 2013
78
18
I tried it out today and it's great.
Really fast with loads of customisation options.
Love the pull in tabs from the sides.
:good:
 
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Aim006

Member
May 15, 2013
29
0
I have been using Dolphin Browser/Jetpack for a long time, but I will see how this one is. I hope it's as fast as Dolphin is.
 

TJBunch1228

Senior Member
Feb 6, 2010
1,373
223
I have a love/hate relationship with every browser besides Chrome. But I gotta say this is really quite nice. It's smooth as silk, I love the customization of the navigation bar as well as the long press options therein.

Good find, OP. Thanks for the share.

Sent from my SGH-T999 using Tapatalk 2
 
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fakeghost

Member
May 17, 2013
37
5
Just Installed it!!!

I have just installed it. i will report back soon with my opinion of the browser
 

fakeghost

Member
May 17, 2013
37
5
I have used it for a day (Approximately)... excellent browser, very fast and i think less memory consumption as compared to chrome which is very very very memory eager... Recommended!!!!
 
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TJBunch1228

Senior Member
Feb 6, 2010
1,373
223
Still living the browser so far, my only complaint is that there is no word wrapping when I zoom in on text. Or is there a setting I'm missing?

Sent from my Nexus 4 using Tapatalk 2
 
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Firtecy

Senior Member
Feb 14, 2013
123
1,124
Wow I'm very impressed, i think i found a new browser for my device! Thanks!

Sent from my LG-P990 using xda app-developers app
 
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ikjadoon

Senior Member
Jul 4, 2012
867
437
Lenovo P11
Still living the browser so far, my only complaint is that there is no word wrapping when I zoom in on text. Or is there a setting I'm missing?

Sent from my Nexus 4 using Tapatalk 2

Same request! It doesn't have text reflow AFAIK, as I have heard it called. I've emailed the developer to see what he feels about it--I'll keep you updated! :)

Flash: yes, must be enabled. Developer says it may be buggy, but I've had no problems. Sorry for bad resolution, but you can see it says installed:

Screenshot_2013-05-21-08-41-50_zps31164123.png


Memory usage: it's at about 100mb with about 5 tabs open for 10 minutes on my Galaxy S3 (2 GB of RAM).
 
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Ultramanoid

Senior Member
Apr 24, 2011
3,967
1
6,988
東京都 Tokyo Metro
This browser blew my mind. Spent four hours customizing the thousands of preferences combinations. And the import / export settings is pure gold for this. Haven't seen anything as useful as this in years.
 

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  • 39
    Not my app, just found in a Reddit post--tried it, it's amazing. Basically, whatever you're using right now is probably inferior. :D I used Boat Browser, then Chrome extensively. Dabbled in Dolphin, Firefox, Maxthon, and a few others. Habit Browser beats them all handily. Amazingly, it's free!!!

    https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=jp.ddo.pigsty.HabitBrowser

    Best mostly unique features of HB (Habit Browser):

    • Set URL re-directs: don't you hate when XDA forum links from a Google search don't open Tapatalk? HB allows you to add new URL re-directs to apps (as many as you want)
    • Customize EVERY toolbar: customize the address bar, tab toolbar, and browsing toolbar (back, forward, refresh, home) to 1) go away 2) place exactly where you want them (top, bottom, this toolbar on top of that, etc.), 3) change the buttons (with swiping and long-press functionality), 4) themes, and lots more
    • Set a real home-page, meaning it will open when you open a new tab.
    • Pie control.
    • Gestures for flicking that DO NOT require another "interface" (like Dolphin's odd implementation).
    • A bajiillion more. Not even kidding; easily over 100 options.

    The first three sold it to me instantly ("sold"...it's ACTUALLY FREE). I implore you to try it, not because I like it, but because it will change your Android browsing experience for the better.
    4
    Hey guys try Yuzu browser. Thank me later.
    3
    Odd name for a browser, Habit Browser, but thanks for the recommendation, this is superb, probably the best all-round browser I've come across (and I've spent the last week trying pretty much every notable one) for someone looking for a full set of features and functions, total customizability and tweakability, all with a light system footprint.

    Some of the features that really stood out for me (in addition to the ones ikjadoon mentioned in the first post):

    1. Custom user agent string. Few browsers allow this, and I use this to set a custom user agent string that says just 'Mobile'. This forces Facebook to load the older, non-Javascript version of the mobile site, which is MUCH lighter both to render and to hold in memory (it uses about half the memory of the usual Facebook mobile site) - at the expense of the different layout and Javascript functionality for instant, non-reloading interaction such as liking posts and auto-refreshing messages.
    Very often, I just want to check and respond to pending notifications/messages, and check out what's going on on my news feed, for which I find this lighter, stripped-down site far easier to work with without memory use skyrocketing and disrupting my other running tasks.

    2. Per-site and per-tab user agent rules - I use this to force Facebook to load its stripped-down non-JS site, while leaving all other sites loading the usual Android or desktop versions. Total control.

    3. The two quick 'pie' menus, accessible by swiping inwards from the screen edges. Fully customisable to hold the functions/toggles/features that you use most often. My quick menus are customised for quick access to inverted rendering, sharing the current page (to Evernote or Messaging), per-tab user agent, favourites, open tabs list, switch to previous/next open tab, open address bar, and a few others, so I can get rid of the main toolbar/menus for a full-screen experience without losing out on usability.

    4. Fully customisable interface, toolbars and menus. This lets me pick exactly what I want to see and use, getting rid of things like the home page button (which I never use), to make room for other buttons and toggles of choice, shift the positions and sizes of the toolbars, or get rid of the menu/toolbar entirely. No other browser comes close, in this department. Outstanding.

    5. Can use Flash. I haven't ever needed to use Flash yet, but it's nice to know that Habit can do it, if I ever need to.

    6. Inverted rendering/night mode, for reading at night or in low-light conditions. Many browsers (including stock AOSP) have this, but not some of the other major contenders, like Opera.

    7. Assorted gestures like flicking to switch tabs, all customisable.

    8. Despite all this, it's about as light and fast as the stock AOSP browser or Naked Browser (which was my top choice for almost a year), and is clearly designed to maximise performance.

    The only underwhelming thing about Habit is the slightly unpolished interface, especially the often quirky language in the menus and settings, that just leaves the overall impression a little rough around the edges. I sent the developer a polite e-mail with suggestions regarding this. And as shallow as this may sound. I also can't shake off the feeling that 'Habit Browser' is an odd name that might steer a lot away from even giving this excellent browser a chance.
    2
    I am not a fan of the UI at all. Its not very polished and way too cluttered.

    What you would call "cluttered" is what makes this browser so unique and well-liked. While most people like the iOS-ish UIs [read: simple, lacking in tweakability, lacking in functional access, lacking in deep user control] and accept what the browser dev structured without the ability to tune it exactly the way one would want it, Habit is the "geek's browser", where it provides a heap of controls, tweaks, functional access, and allows one to make the browser behave exactly the way they want it.

    To me, "polish" is exposing all possible controls and tweakability of a browser. Habit does this well. It is not for everyone. Just like not everyone wants to root and deeply customize their device--they rather use it as is. For those majority of the population [read: not geeky, not "truly" technical, don't know what ADB is lol], there are plenty of more "polished" and less "cluttered" 3rd-party browsers out there.....

    I, for one, feel that Habit fills a sorely missing gap in the browser space. I just wished Habit would use its own framework so that it can remember passwords under KK.....
    2
    Update to all users: the developer has rewritten the entire application from scratch! :)

    New Habit Browser: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=jp.ddo.pigsty.HabitBrowser

    Seems identical in features. UI is a little bigger and themes are a bit different. I didn't import settings from the old app-it just took 5 minutes to manually copy them over.

    At least one bug is fixed: tapping the Google search box does not cause the page to jump up and then down again (kept tapping the one below the one I wanted to tap).

    Otherwise, nothing much. :) Very glad and happy to have an active dev.