I DO get tired of skating along looking for the ?
Background in hard sciences, computing (FOSS), electronics, music, Zen.
- 5 Posts
- 18 Comments
kalkulat@lemmy.worldto Firefox@lemmy.ml•Wave of 150 crypto-draining extensions hits Firefox add-on storeEnglish31·15 days ago“♫ Crypto ♫ through the tulips ♫ come drink up ♫ crypto juleps … with meeee”
kalkulat@lemmy.worldto Firefox@lemmy.ml•As a distro hopping Firefox enjoyer, is it possible to install and configure Firefox extensions through the command line after a fresh install?English5·25 days agoI install and use FF from my home folder. As a result, I can simply copy my ‘old’ firefox folder and .mozilla folder (containing the FF config files) into the new distro’s home. That way all of the features, settings, and extensions remain the same, regardless of the distro I’ve moved to.
Inside the .mozilla/Firefox/ folder you’ll find separate folders for your profiles. The ‘about:profiles’ window lets you switch between them.If you want to experiment with one, make an archive of its folder. If you try something that doesn’t work out, you can throw the messed-up profile away and extract a fresh copy from your archive, all’s well. There are also many files INSIDE that profile folder you can toy with. Many, many options in this setup.
Easy to complain about it, but when you don’t offer a better alternative, it leads nowhere.
kalkulat@lemmy.worldto Firefox@lemmy.ml•Firefox could be doomed without Google search deal, says executive63·4 months agoLinux Mint puts out a great OS for a few thousand per month. With the start it’s got, Firefox could go on for decades without more income.
kalkulat@lemmy.worldto Firefox@lemmy.ml•How do you manage bookmarks in Firefox? Especially Firefox Android?2·9 months agoFirst of all, the meagre ‘search’ in ‘Manage Bookmarks’ does not tell you where a ‘found’ bookmark IS, which makes it next to useless. (If ONLY it would tell you that in the list you see when you click the URL.)
Over the years (on DESKTOP, I can only guess the horrors on tinyscreen) I’ve developed a system of folders with generic names that I use to sort BMs as I add them. My 3 top categories - the only ones visible in the ‘Toolbar’ are OFTEN (frequently visited sites grouped by folder), RESOURCES (folders at the top are most-visited) and LOCAL (most-visited on top). I also use the ‘New bookmark order’ extension, which adds new bookmarks to THE TOP of whatever folder I put them in (easy to open and drag-into folder topic).
Works, but it’s hardly ideal, that’s for sure. Don’t think anyone at Moz has addressed this design in years.)
kalkulat@lemmy.worldto Firefox@lemmy.ml•Zen Browser: A New Privacy-Focused Browser(Firefox)2·10 months agoPractically speaking, probably not.
kalkulat@lemmy.worldto Firefox@lemmy.ml•Zen Browser: A New Privacy-Focused Browser(Firefox)2·10 months agoAfter many years of using FFox, I just tried a Zen install on Linux. It did not turn out as well as I hoped.
I did not have FFoxesr installed in the way the OS would have installed it (though it was still in the user folder). This meant that Zen did/could not see my bookmarks, extensions or passwords … and the options it offered didn’t work out. (It wanted an HTML bookmarks file … I had them saved as JSON … and a ‘CSV’ (??) passwords file … wherever that is … and it found no extensions folder.) So, for starters, years of customizations had to be manually restored.
But, fair shake, I did manually re-install bookmarks AND a few extensions that had saved databases (e.g. UBO, NoScript, Block site). (It ignored the sub-folders in the JSON bookmarks folders, dumping all bookmarks into the top-levels.) And I had to re-create all the settings. (Most of which exist in the .mozilla folder on Linux … easy to find.)
I played for an hour with what I put there (without a menu bar … or a tab bar, all URIs are shoved together -by name- in a sidebar … I did figure out how to see a bookmark bar). I could discern no -truly useful- advantages to it. None. That was not offset by some pretty cosmetics. So even if you do get all of your customizations past the one-size-fits-all install, for long-time FF users I see no substantial advantages to the Zen browser.
kalkulat@lemmy.worldto Firefox@lemmy.ml•Zen Browser: A New Privacy-Focused Browser(Firefox)95·10 months agoOne thing that seems to be missing from most Zen promotion is that Firefox has a huge collection of add-on options/extentions. Hard to beat of you’re reliant on several of them. Keeps me from even trying it.
kalkulat@lemmy.worldOPto Work Reform@lemmy.world•Ghost jobs are wreaking havoc on tech workers341·10 months agoIt’s gross, fraudulent as three-card monte, and … as with many corporate tricksters … there needs to be a law with prison terms.
kalkulat@lemmy.worldOPto Mildly Infuriating@lemmy.world•Bug bounty denied? Hmmm ... OK, let's see ...English62·10 months agoI specially liked the part where he collected $50k by clueing the affected companies.
kalkulat@lemmy.worldto Firefox@lemmy.ml•Jonathan Kamens: "It has come to my attention that many of the people complaining about Firefox's PPA experiment don't actually understand what PPA is…" - federate.social41·1 year agoGo ahead and send me ads, and I’ll just block your site … never go there except when someone tries to trick me into it, and then my SITE-BLOCKER will refuse for me. Our now and future business IS OVER.
“But why don’t you just trust us?” Because I’ve been online for 30 years and it’s been downhill ever since.
kalkulat@lemmy.worldto Piracy: ꜱᴀɪʟ ᴛʜᴇ ʜɪɢʜ ꜱᴇᴀꜱ@lemmy.dbzer0.com•Users with personal music libraries, how do you decide what to download?English3·2 years agoFLAC is good, but not necessary for background listening. At 192k the average song is ~ 5Mb. 100k x 5 = 0.5 TB.
kalkulat@lemmy.worldto Piracy: ꜱᴀɪʟ ᴛʜᴇ ʜɪɢʜ ꜱᴇᴀꜱ@lemmy.dbzer0.com•Users with personal music libraries, how do you decide what to download?English2·2 years agoWith a long, varied list of select internet radio stations, you can choose what genre (or special weekly show) you want to listen to at the moment. Picked by people, not algorithms. Keep a playlist of the stations you like best, startup your player (like VLC) with the list, and pick the one you’re in the mood for.
Or you could just collect mp3s locally for choosier days, dump a bunch of them into VLC, listen to them in album or random order. In either case, at no cost.
kalkulat@lemmy.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•One single partition for Linux versus using a partition table?2·2 years agoI think the last time I installed Mint (21.2) it DID create a swapfile. Don’t use it, so commented that out in /ETC/FSTAB.
kalkulat@lemmy.worldto Linux@lemmy.ml•One single partition for Linux versus using a partition table?6·2 years agoWhen I started with Linux, I was happy to learn that I didn’t need a bunch of separate partitions, and have installed all-in-one (except for boot of course!) since. Whatever works fine for you (-and- is easiest) is the right way! (What you’re doing was once common practice, and serves just as well. No disadvantage in staying with the familiar.)
After I got up to 8GB memory, stopped using swap … easier on the hard drive -and- the SSD. (I move most data to the HD … including TimeShift … except what I use regularly.)
I use Mint as well; for me this keeps things as simple as possible. When I install a new OS version (always with the same XFCE DE) I do put THAT on a new partition (rather than try the upgrade route and risk damaging my daily driver) using the same UserName. A new Home is created within the install partition (does nothing but hold the User folder.)
To keep from having to reconfig -almost everthing- in the new OS all over again I evolved a system. First I verify that the new install boots properly, I then use a Live USB to copy the old User .config file (and the apps and their support folders I keep in user) to the new User folder. Saves hours of reconfiguring most things. The new up-to-date OS mostly resembles and works like the old one … without the upgrade risks.
Not complaint but suggestion: When I get to the bottom of a column of msgs and click the NEXT button … page should scroll to the top!
Used it ever since iCab went away. Tried all the rest, they don’t measure up.