

Waterfox has a family resemblance to other Mozilla-based browsers, with a dark blue Start button instead of Firefox's orange. When it comes to looks and extras, Waterfox doesn't disappoint in a side-by-side comparison with the latest Firefox release. When we first opened Waterfox, it displayed our bookmarks and other personal data from Firefox. As the Waterfox Web site states, speed is its mission. Just converting Mozilla's source code for 64-bit Windows doesn't do enough to make Waterfox stand apart from Firefox and other Firefox-based Web browsers other unique tweaks help it exploit the speed of 64-bit systems. Software designed for 64-bit Windows editions can take advantage of faster RAM and processing speeds and greater stability in 64-bit systems. The browser's developers modified the Firefox source code specifically for machines running 64-bit versions of Windows.
