Two different applications. For skidding, do not use double braid or any of the others including 3 strand twisted. Dirt, mud, rocks, etc are not friendly to ropes.
The second reason, and more important, most of those linesets have a 30% stretch ratio (think rubber band effect). When they let loose, and they will, anything in the way is in for a world of hurt. Tom Tree's might know a mutual friend from Long Island who lost an eye to that stored energy.
Wire rope on the ground or you could go with some of the specificly designed winch ropes, low stretch ratio and hollow braid (easy to splice back together) and because of the hollow braid when it snaps the energy is lost quickly.
For a pull line you need to look at what you are doing. That 3/4" lineset you are looking at should have a ration of ~25K. Sticking to a 10/1 saftey rating that would give you 2,500 pounds of pull capacity. Are you using a 4 x 4 to pull them over with?
The weight is the factor that I'm thinking about with that line. For the first half of the day it might not be a factory, come friday afternoon...it will be. Soon it'll end up sitting in the back of the truck because it's to much of a PITA to take out. Instead, get the lineset higher in the tree and drop back to a 9/16 or 5/8. If you do not climb, buy a throw line set (line, a few bean bags, and storage bag/box) then learn to use it. With minimal pratice you'll be able to hit crotches 60+ feet up.
This all presumes that you are cutting firewood in forestated areas. If not, everything changes.