Log a bug if you want to see it fixed.
Log a bug if you want to see it fixed.
That’s correct.
Although Mozilla is a partner working on the project, not just a passive integrator.
Just use uBlock Origin instead.
Do you have a link to the bug?
I’m sorry, but your assertion that those who are upset with nvidia are mostly “newbs” is nonsense.
Plenty of more experienced users despise nvidia as well, and they have done immense damage to the Linux desktop.
In fact I would argue the opposite, given the proliferation of distros focused on new users which specialise in making nvidia drivers easily accessible for these users.
Fedora, Red Hat and Ubuntu are Wayland by default, as are Debian and openSUSE Tumbleweed/Leap Gnome.
It is much more difficult than that imo.
Many of the Chromium forks have small teams, sigificantly smaller and with little actual in-engine experience compared to Firefox for example.
These teams need to have sufficient resources to maintain a reasonably significant fork of a standard, which will likely get harder over time, and which none of them presently deal with, as they ride the standards implemented by Chromium so far.
Additionally they would have to maintain their own extension stores, which many presently don’t.
I live in fear that the Phoronix forums will federate…
Also limiting rule updates to new extension versions will essentially make it impossible for adblockers to outpace anti-adblock interventions.
A lot of people don’t realise that tampermonkey isn’t libre in my experience.
Why do you expect that Edge wouldn’t adopt Google-like MV3 along with Chrome?
Microsoft adopted Chromium in order to minimise development costs in a product it doesn’t see as core, something which would be incurred if it had to maintain its own fork of mv3, and is incentivized through Bing to pursue a similar approach.
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Developer edition is essentially Firefox beta, with some tweaks that developers may prefer by default, and some experimental dev features.
As I understand it, it aligns with beta, but is an early beta, meaning that while it shares its codebase, it may get access to some feature rollouts (that are gated by edition) slightly earlier than true Firefox Beta.
It is opensource. The only thing that aren’t are some required Google Play libraries for notifications and the EME - Firefox can’t make those open as it doesn’t control them.
Yeah, I’m aware. My fault for not specifying I was talking about stable.
Unless I am misunderstanding you, it is, on Dec 14.
Extensions just have to specify they are compatible.
Definitely, along with the specs of your phone.
This is a point release, what do you expect?