That will stop working way sooner than you’d like. Freezing a browser isn’t tenable at all, not just for features websites are expecting but also security issues. There’s a reason every browser except Safari has a 6 weeks release cycle.
Web tech doesn’t evolve that fast. You can use a 1 year old version today without worrying about missing any website functionality.
What you’re missing is features that the browser itself introduces, but in this case those would be anti-features so arguably Chrome will be getting worse.
Then there’s of course the security vulnerabilities.
Of course the whole discussion is moot since there’s a much simpler alternative, switching to another browser.
Or realizing they can stick to an older Chrome version with V2 extensions that retain full capabilities…
That will stop working way sooner than you’d like. Freezing a browser isn’t tenable at all, not just for features websites are expecting but also security issues. There’s a reason every browser except Safari has a 6 weeks release cycle.
Web tech doesn’t evolve that fast. You can use a 1 year old version today without worrying about missing any website functionality.
What you’re missing is features that the browser itself introduces, but in this case those would be anti-features so arguably Chrome will be getting worse.
Then there’s of course the security vulnerabilities.
Of course the whole discussion is moot since there’s a much simpler alternative, switching to another browser.
Vvvat?