The first several days after the in-place upgrade from 19.2 to 19.3 were rough for me (*terrible* performance) but soon settled down after some tweaks and updates. PS: Are you still using Linux Mint MATE? How’s it working out for you? I’m still using Mint Cinnamon. On a few occasions when I’ve run into one of these pages, I’ve managed to load it in Basilisk - better Basilisk than relentless tracker/profiler Google Chrome - but that’s about the extent of my experience with it. One of Pale Moon’s better-known issues is that the GAFAM companies have been developing new (sometimes proprietary) Web standards at breakneck speed, and W3C-compliant browsers like Pale Moon have a hard time loading pages that are coded to those new standards. It’s not really intended to be anyone’s primary browser. Thanks for caring for my free time, Vaak: Basilisk is billed as Moonchild Productions’ experimental, developmental browser, where they road-test things they are considering implementing in future versions of Pale Moon. It doesn’t take a novel to counter weak arguments, I still have enough free time left anyway. How about you get a life instead of whining about other commenters? It literally takes me five minutes to debunk the Mozilla fanboys, the impact on my life is thus negligible. > Why don’t you just live and let live?īecause neither do the Mozilla fanboys and fangirls? Give me an actual reason to do so, and I might start with it. Not sure you really want that, Miss Sophie. Furthermore, calls for me to leave or for Martin Brinkmann to censor me would rather lead to me doubling down on my Brave recommendation. Sorry to disappoint you, I will continue to hold a differing view from yours and I will express it, too. I just can’t afford to listen to opposing views anymore.” – This is what you sound like, and this is what you really mean. > Please don’t keep coming on here ranting about it. Yet thankfully, most people like don’t even know what they are talking about, so their nonsense is easy to counter. The amount of bullshit and smearing said about Brave, coming almost exclusively from Mozilla fanboys, is impressive. did, I just defended it once again against (expected) random Mozilla fanboy nonsense. You have clearly missed the fact that I didn’t even bring up Brave here. Tin-foil hattery from bizarre coincidences? Sure, but nefarious anti-privacy decisions and mistakes afterwards strongly Miss Sophie! Don’t let the Lion’s head get in the way of your butler… Thats 2 strikes for one specific company i wont mention. Having said all that, involvements to infiltrate cryptography standards (extended random and elliptic curve ring any bells?) is a bit closer to home… CTO positions seem quite coveted. Mozilla then partnered with them for its anti-tracking lists, 2 modes of pointless subpar tracking protection, locked down from user modification. CTO is ex-nsa, company seemed to spring from nothing.Įarly on it offered its privacy search addon for firefox which curiously, would fiddle with about:config flags to do with search suggestions (separate from its search field btw, and to do with sending out info to search engines as you typed), which it had no buisness doing and which addons were forbidden from doing covertly. There are not that many browsers that match the description which made the most popular ones, Waterfox and Pale Moon, the most likely target for a sale.ĭisconnect Privacy Pro / premium, its vpn, search things, for iphone, browsers, has been one to watch in my opinion for other reasons. Build system work is required for this role sometimes, but that’s one of the fun parts! Key goals for this role: Keep a “classic†version of the browser up-to-date with security patches update components where possible and create better compatibility with legacy add-ons for the newer version of the platform that supports them. You will work with experts who know the Mozilla platform inside-out, while being a key contributor to novel open-source products which already have a passionate and growing user base. This is a diverse role that will involve “hacking†on the Mozilla platform, mostly on the backend. System1 is hiring a Web Browser Developer to join our team. The job description provides insight on the potential target: It revealed that development would focus on the Mozilla platform and that a key goal was to keep a classic version of the browser up-to-date.
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