
I went with it because I was able to implement it in an afternoon, their licensing was compatible with our use, and I had a tight deadline.

For writing steps and substeps, I use a WYSIWYG HTML editor called TynyMCE. I have a web app that allows customers to make templates for their standard operating procedures that they pull from our main product. But I still think it has some catching up to do with Chrome. It is my primary browser for both development and personal use.

I've been shilling for Firefox for years.
