On Wed, 2017-11-08 at 19:59 +0000, davidson wrote: > > chromium (duh. included for completeness) > dillo > edbrowse > firefox-esr (OP wants something else; included for completeness) > iceweasel (duh. included for completeness) > links > links2 > luakit > midori > netsurf, netsurf-fb, netsurf-gtk > hv3 (due to a missing library in debian it lacks javascript support) > xombrero
There is probably also still a text-based browser called elinks, although I haven't tried using it in over two years. I used to use it for simple stuff when working from Debian 6 with no graphics (server mode). elinks was better than lynx, but it wouldn't run much in the way of javascript or anything fancy. It was great for browsing most kinds of software documentation presented as html. It was also good for logging in to public wi-fi, where they have you to agree to a usage policy before letting you go online. There is also QupZilla available on Debian 9, but I've never used it. Don't forget about Opera. They have a .deb file of their latest browser, which can be downloaded from opera.com, but I can't get it to install when I try installing it on Debian 9 (64-bit). I get some complaint about the package not being a proper package. I have run Opera on Fedora 24 in the recent past, with no problems.