With some sites on the Internet, you can fully work only in certain browsers - programs with which you open and view web pages. After an unsuccessful attempt to access the content of the site, the user is recommended to go to it from another browser. But how can a person ignorant of computer terms and names determine which browser they have?
Instructions
Step 1
Long gone are the days when most of the users accessed the Internet through the Internet Explorer preinstalled in Windows. There are alternative and functional Mozilla Firefox, Opera, Google Chrom, Safari and other web browsers. Many modern computers have both Internet Explorer and Google Chrome installed by default, as well as other browsers.
Step 2
So, you are used to accessing the Internet by pressing some button on the desktop or taskbar, and you have no idea what program this button refers to. This is not difficult to figure out, because there are not so many options.
Step 3
If to access the Internet you click on the button with the letter "E" in blue, which is surrounded by a yellow arc, then your browser is Internet Explorer (Internet Explorer). If the button is a red letter "O" - you are using the Opera browser.
Step 4
If the icon depicts a fox on the globe, your browser is Mozilla Firefox (Mozilla Firefox or just Mozilla). If the icon is in the form of a ball with a blue core and a three-color circle of red, yellow and green colors, you go online using Google Chrome (Google Chrome). Well, if the icon is in the form of a compass, then your Internet browser Safari (Safari).