Firefox encountered a sad
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Fewer calories!
Left for you after clicking through all the BS.
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DPRK: "it's showtime"
It's not like they're more of an insane surreal shit show of delusional authoritarianism.
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At this point it's on web developers, and they sure as hell are prioritizing chromium browsers, likely out of time constraint (and also fuckery at the behest of corporate overlords).
I went to book rooms tonight in Vegas at the Golden Nugget for the solar convention this week.
Firefox couldn't click through to the booking page. It worked for one room but not two. Chromium worked (ish), but also tried to say that it was almost double the rack rate than what the listing showed on Firefox.
I eventually went to kayak and despite glitches, booked the rooms, and still ended up paying more than I should have.
The Internet has become fundamentally broken due to sites trying their stupid fuckery of tracking and pricing shenanigans, let alone just trying to find basic information.
(Sorry I'm drunk and pissed off)
If i had been through that, i would also be drunk and pissed off.
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It's not like they're more of an insane surreal shit show of delusional authoritarianism.
No, they definitely are.
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No, they definitely are.
wrote last edited by [email protected]Oh theyre definitely a lot of that, but im not so sure about more. America's done a pretty good job closing the gap.
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We need to go back to gopher or one of those newer simple protocols. It's just too complex to implement HTML / CSS / JavaScript and all the other stuff correctly from scratch.
I'd some plans to write my own e-pub reader, since all the existing ones are shite in their own way, but since e-pub files are secretly xhtml and css in disguise, it's actually a hell of a job, much bigger than I'd anticipated.
I don't think making network requests for files nor parsing any of those formats is so difficult, and while the actual layout rules interact in a complicated way they're not insurmountable. However, doing it securely and in a way that runs at an acceptable speed is much harder. Tokenizing JS and interpreting it isn't so bad, but that's not going to run a modern website with tens of thousands of lines of scripts. Displaying video with hardware acceleration? Best bust out some code.
Moving to another protocol will either need the cooperation of everyone everywhere all at once, or since that'll never happen, alternatively convincing all the major browser manufacturers to support both for a while so that other companies can enter the market, which will also never happen. Going to be a tough sell.
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But Why?
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somehow, some people can use the net without an adblocker. i have no idea how, but they're out there.
Bunch of freaks
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Google sucks, uninstall Chromium stuff
Mozilla starts sucking and is also American, move to Librewolf fork as a half measure, it sucks.
Just wait for Ladybird bro
It's also American
Why can't Europeans into web engine dev?
How does Librewolf suck?
And Servo is hosted by the Linux Foundation Europe btw.
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What's wrong with Librewolf? I'm currently using Firefox and thinking about switching.
Give it a go and let us know what you think! I used it for a while, and the biggest annoyance was trying to use YouTube with it where videos increasingly were more difficult to load for some reason. I blame Google for that, honestly.
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Could always try floorp as another half measure
That's where I am currently.. just really wish there was something truly separate from all the bs
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somehow, some people can use the net without an adblocker. i have no idea how, but they're out there.
And I'm grateful for these people. If everyone was using adblockers then companies like Google and advertisers would try even harder to break adblockers so it's best if some amount of the population continues to browse without adblockers so I can get ad free access to the internet
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Didn't make Chrome Adblockers unusable a while ago? Are 90% of the people now using chrome with ads??
I see it all the time at work: all the boomers rawdogging the web on Edge, like the company IT department intended.
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I need chrome for work. And only ever use it for work. Because work sucks like that.
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Fewer calories!
wrote last edited by [email protected]it's really a lifesaver for us lactose intolerant folk. regular uBo gives me gas.
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I see it all the time at work: all the boomers rawdogging the web on Edge, like the company IT department intended.
You can still get uBlock Origin for Edge.
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You can still get uBlock Origin for Edge.
Not on the company managed installs. They only allow a couple of plugins. Not that my colleagues would know what they're missing.
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I'd some plans to write my own e-pub reader, since all the existing ones are shite in their own way, but since e-pub files are secretly xhtml and css in disguise, it's actually a hell of a job, much bigger than I'd anticipated.
I don't think making network requests for files nor parsing any of those formats is so difficult, and while the actual layout rules interact in a complicated way they're not insurmountable. However, doing it securely and in a way that runs at an acceptable speed is much harder. Tokenizing JS and interpreting it isn't so bad, but that's not going to run a modern website with tens of thousands of lines of scripts. Displaying video with hardware acceleration? Best bust out some code.
Moving to another protocol will either need the cooperation of everyone everywhere all at once, or since that'll never happen, alternatively convincing all the major browser manufacturers to support both for a while so that other companies can enter the market, which will also never happen. Going to be a tough sell.
You're correct but besides implementation effort I personally think the web has become too "free" or "rich".
I don't actually like that every website has a slightly or sometimes completely different layout, design philosophy, tech stack etc. Often this freedom is just used to display ads everywhere, track users or to look "on brand" but it's difficult to find the actual content (as user, but also if you want to find it programmatically). With web assembly it's become even more opaque. It's also pretty difficult to do anything dynamic (not a static website) in a secure way. Most of the common frameworks and CMS have a ton of dependencies and almost every one of them can impact safety in a negative way.
Not that I want to get rid of it completely. There are certainly a lot of websites that make good use of the freedom to create a unique and worthwhile experience but for a very very large part of the web (company information, blogs, wikis, forums etc) I'd prefer something much more simple that's more straight to the point.
E.g. personally I was super sad that the usenet died and thought (especially at the beginning) that web forums where a big downgrade. Same with early web chats compared with IRC.
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I need chrome for work. And only ever use it for work. Because work sucks like that.
My work requires edge 🤮
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My work requires edge 🤮
Condolences friend.