

We could also create a portable version of the software and import favorites, cookies, passwords, and other data from our other browsers. We started with our usual broadband settings and then tried Comodo's DNS service. IceDragon's installation involves several options, including setting your Internet connection to use Comodo's secure (and free) Secure DNS service all the time, just with IceDragon (the default option, and our choice) or not at all.

The latest version, IceDragon v22, is the same as Mozilla's latest Firefox release, v22. There's currently no 64-bit IceDragon release, but we tried the regular 32-bit version in 64-bit Windows 7 Home Premium, and it browsed with the best of them, and not just Firefox but also Chrome and its Comodo cousin, Dragon. IceDragon is fully compatible with all Firefox plug-ins and add-ons, too. Like the Chrome-based Comodo Dragon, IceDragon offers a variety of security and performance enhancements to the browser core, such as improved social media integration, fast page loading via Comodo's integrated secure DNS service, and SiteInspector, which scans Web pages for malware directly from the browser. Comodo IceDragon is a secure Web browser based on the same open-source browser engine that powers Mozilla's Firefox.
