Works well and I've not seen a page it doesn't render.
![safari vs firefox display safari vs firefox display](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/24573738/101290783-601b6500-37d2-11eb-8153-eb141ba9706d.png)
The better solution is to use a browser that works with those sites. I don't know if any of that will let the stuff appear in Safari, but it's free, easy to do and *might* work. When the far side asks what kind of browser you are, the browser will answer with what you select instead of Safari. The personalization options on both browsers are limited. Fortunately, you can set your preferred search engine if you want. Firefox has set Google as its default SE, whereas Edge has Microsoft’s Bing. When it comes to search, the default search engine is different. One of the items on that menu is "User Agent" where you can pick what browser you want to emulate. If you switch from Edge to Firefox, you will notice the difference right away. In Safari, open Preferences, then click on the "Advanced" button and check the box at the bottom of the window for "Show Develop Menu in menu bar." On the top bar, a new button will be there called Develop. So, when you use Safari, the non-standard or non-supported stuff doesn't work. Given that the vast majority of sites use Windows, those sites develop their websites for Internet Explorer, or now Edge and don't bother to test with any other browser. The problem is that a lot of websites use HTML that is either non-standard, or not supported by Safari, or both. I don't think we need a lot of other information to diagnose the issue.
#Safari vs firefox display how to
With my huge deficit of how to deal with issues like this, it's always both a pleasure and a relief to come here and learn from you guys. Obviously I'm not as knowledgeable as are you guys here but I'd like to understand the mechanics of 'not displaying vs.
![safari vs firefox display safari vs firefox display](https://i.stack.imgur.com/6icUE.jpg)
![safari vs firefox display safari vs firefox display](https://www.mudisign.de/images/yootheme/firefox-igesia.png)
It took me awhile to realize that, while I liked Safari, I couldn't get my work done efficiently while using it because I couldn't "see" what I needed to see. In a flash, it was if I was looking at two different pages! All kinds of buttons appeared and I was able to perform tasks that I couldn't when using Safari. Incredibly frustrating until about two years ago I tried a different browser, in this case, Firefox, and loaded the same sites. I had to switch from Safari because it didn't always show me buttons/boxes to click on, for example, to go a different section of information, sign in, etc. Almost on a daily basis, and as a sole practitioner, I use health insurance companies' websites to determine patient eligibility, co-payments, procedural allowances, etc.