Extensions that still work: the Chromium MV3 story in Maho
We get the same question every week. Will my extensions work in Maho? Mostly yes. The exceptions are intentional. Here is the actual list.
We get the same question every week. Will my extensions work in Maho? Mostly yes. The exceptions are intentional. Here is the actual list.
Most browsers treat the keyboard as accessibility, not as the primary interface. Maho’s bet is the other direction. Here is the model, the cheatsheet, and the places we still owe you better.
Zen and Maho both reach for a better browser in 2026, from different starting points. One is Firefox with taste. One is Chromium with an agent. The choice is not a tie.
Vivaldi was the first browser that respected the power user. Maho is built for a different decade and a different shape of power. Both are still right.
An account is a price most browsers make you pay for sync. We did not want to charge it. This is how the alternative works.
Two macOS-native browsers built for keyboard-first power users. SigmaOS picked one ceiling. Maho picked another. Here is where they diverge.
Browser extensions are heavy and ask for permissions you never wanted to grant. Boosts are the lighter answer for per-site customization.
Tab groups are fine until your day stops being one shape. Spaces are what you reach for when your work has more than one mode.