Waterfox & Pale Moon has accomplished it. But, I would greatly prefer using Comodo Products entirely!
Waterfox felt more reliable when it didn't function as AVG bloatware. The fact that you have to install it with custom settings to refuse the 'free' AVG component is a major kick in the consumer's nose.
As for Pale Moon, I don't much care for their sketchy design choices. The dedicated homepage feels more linkbait-rich than even Chrome Stable touts. Soma.FM is great yo, but I don't need a recommendation for these things on the official starting site... it only adds more clutter and more cold-start time!
But more to the point, I think Comodo should keep things similar to the layout of the 32-bit variant if they ever design a 64-bit CID, meaning:
- No text on the start-up screen declaring CID is running in '64 bit mode'. A visual cue on the top left IceDragon logo should suffice (Pale Moon-style)
- No excessive warnings about plug-in incompatibility. Having one specifically on the 'Add-ons' page is fine and dandy, but having that warning prompted whenever the client adds some code is very much infuriating
- Try to mention which plug-ins have a 64-bit counterpart. A short prompt for Flash, Java, Silverlight, and other known services would be fantastic.
All this is definitely nit-picking, but even those little, streamlining details are vastly appreciated by the end user.
