Dealing with a faulty web browser that keeps crashing is like banging your head against a wall. You need it to surf the Internet, but you long to break free of all of its issues.
So if you've totally had it with your current browser (I'm talking about you, Firefox), but are afraid to separate due to your intricate organization of your bookmarks, don't be. You can export your bookmarks from whatever browser you're using now and install them on a new, fresh browser of your choosing. Best of all, you can do this in just three steps.
Find out how when you read more.
- Open up the browser you want to export from. Click on File, and Export Bookmarks (if you're exporting from Firefox, you'll click on Bookmarks, Organize Bookmarks, then click on the export tab on the pop-up window), and save the HTML file to your desktop.
- Next, open up the browser you want to import to, go to File, and Import, and select the HTML file you just saved (if you're importing to Flock, it will automatically detect which browsers you have available and import). You should find your file of imported bookmarks on your toolbar, or in your bookmarks menu.
- Then, just drag and drop your bookmark folders where you want them to be on your toolbar and you're set to go!
Source: Getty

Miu Miu
TX Technoluxury
Faith
I love that you guys mentioned Flock! I absolutely love that browser
1I don't think this works in Chrome.
So I'm still using Opera
2I went back to IE this time 8 after using Firefox for about 2 years. At first it'd run better in Vista, but just a weeks ago it started becoming a drag.

3Might give Flock a try!
Just one question Geek...That is not your real laptop in the tras bin is it?
*just concerned*
I'm a web designer so I have to use multiple machines, and multiple browsers regularly. I use a bookmark synching plugin called X-Marks.
This means I have the same bookmarks on all of my machines and browsers so I don't have to do all that faffing about detailed in this article. So long as I have a net connection, it synchs them all live.
Incidentally, I've not had any problems with FireFox and it's still my favourite
(Opera is close second)
4bookmark loss makes me think of that episode of flipping out.
5I use xmarks. formerly called foxmarks. It's great when I switch between computers and I just hit the sync button at the end of the day. so easy
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