Actually I feel the pendulum has stopped a few months ago and is slowly starting to go back. Some major things in my world:
- I now only have one website I need to use that only works in Chrome.
- Devs seems to start to care
- LibreWolf is starting to give Mozilla a run for its money
- I'm optimistic that we will see some break through, sooner or later, where Chrome will be punished as hard as IE was: fines, regulations and a browser choice dialog for starters (but please folks, it can happen a lot faster if it it isn't just "that one weird loon", so do contact your local authorities and do complain about how Chrome has destroyed a thriving ecosystem. And if you work in Google, do ask tough questions.)
> Firefox no longer makes part of browser matrixes, and is mostly ignored by QA teams.
which is how a browser dies - when sites and apps stop checking whether they are complying with web standards using more than a single reference browser.
Hopefully, chrome becomes like the IE of old, and a new "chrome" comes along to rescue the web.
The alternative is not "unity", it's Google dictating standards that only ostensibly help them and their ad business.