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muhyb, a firefox en Firefox 127's private window handling angers users

Is this a Windows problem I'm too Linux to understand?

Oisteink, a firefox en Firefox 127's private window handling angers users

Yes - this is why my dad (80) and my nephew (23) stopped using Firefox . It’s the only reason anyone use Firefox and without it nobody will use it.

DarkThoughts,

The only reason people use Firefox is because of an icon in privacy mode? What?

Oisteink,

Sorry - my bad. Turns out it’s just 1 guy on the forums and theregister that cares.

TachyonTele,

What browser did your hypothetical dad and nephew switch to?

Oisteink,

Edge! It’s Firefox but with ai

TachyonTele,

Ah ok, I didn't realize you were making a joke.

Zachariah, a firefox en Firefox 127's private window handling angers users
@Zachariah@lemmy.world avatar

Yeah, about:config is one of the best things about Firefox. It allows a standard user not to stumble into settings that would lead to frustration or needing help. But it also lets power users use Firefox the way they want to. I’m always annoyed when a setting is removed from there.

RestrictedAccount, a firefox en Mozilla restores Firefox add-ons banned in Russia

My guess is that they complied long enough to get their people the F^€k out of Russia.

hydroptic, a firefox en Mozilla restores Firefox add-ons banned in Russia

Browser maker decided not to follow Putin's orders. Well done

Only after it caused a PR flap for them, though

Auzy,

Not really honestly. I think their concerns were valid until they investigated.

Everyone thinks it's easy to ignore legal demands. But there is a reason why most abuse isn't reported to police.

I believe their story honestly

hydroptic,

Yeah that's a fair point, although it's still a bit… well, funny (not "funny ha ha") that they even temporarily blocked those extensions. Not sure what Roskomnadzor could have done if Mozilla had refused even a temporary block, at least assuming the foundation doesn't have any legal entities in Russia which they may well have

Auzy,

Even if there is no legal entities in Russia though, they might have remote workers

PeutMieuxFaire, a opensource en Free software pioneer Stallman reveals cancer diagnosis
@PeutMieuxFaire@kbin.social avatar

:(

Richard Stallman has revealed he is undergoing treatment for non-Hodgkin lymphoma, a form of cancer of the white blood cells, but says that his prognosis is good.

The video of his speech is here but the sound is said to be poor: https://audio-video.gnu.org/video/gnu40/rms-gnu40.webm

OsrsNeedsF2P, a opensource en OpenTF forks Terraform and says HashiCorp is the instigator

OpenTF will revert back to, or continue under, the MPL. “We’d love to license the project under the Apache 2.0, but the MPL isn’t compatible with it, so it’ll stay MPL,” said Stadil

Thank god for MPL and GPL

Zima, a science en Workers do less, err more in the afternoon, says study

It's not because it's an afternoon, it's because they don't want to work on the weekend i it goes badly.

Jarmer, a linux en Linux has nearly half of the desktop OS Linux market
@Jarmer@kbin.social avatar

is there a titlegore magazine here? Because this belongs there.

penguinimus,

I wonder what has the other half.

ripcord, a linux en Linux has nearly half of the desktop OS Linux market
@ripcord@kbin.social avatar

Have to say, I've been using Linux since Slackware 95. And ChromeOS + Debian container is my favorite desktop Linux experience. I do wish a couple of things are different, but with the Android app support too and the nearly seamless Wayland integration etc it's just been so...low-maintenance. For work as a developer, etc.

Limitless_screaming, a linux en Linux has nearly half of the desktop OS Linux market
@Limitless_screaming@kbin.social avatar

Most people are not just happy because OSes that use the linux kernel now account for 3% of desktop Oses, but because presumably 3 percent of desktop users are using an OS that gives them choice and freedom. Which as the article mentioned isn't a trait of ChromeOS, the less popular ChromiumOS on the other hand, I would happily consider Linux as having 7% of desktop users out there if ChromiumOS had that 4%.

TeaEarlGrayHot, a linux en Linux has nearly half of the desktop OS Linux market

Agreed that ChromeOS is a linux distro, weird, but a distro nonetheless! I am curious as to what percentage of ChromeOS users have actually enabled linux apps vs those who just use Chrome

cinaed666, a linux en Two new Linux desktops, one with deep roots, come to Debian [Lomiri and GSDE]
@cinaed666@kbin.social avatar

I've been on XFCE for well over 15 years, maybe nearly 20.
In the beginning I ran Xubuntu because it was faster than Gnome 2 on my ancient laptop.
Nowadays, I just run it out of habit on top of Arch. I've had my stints on KDE and modern Gnome, but I like how "out of the way" XFCE is.

GSDE looks interesting, but I'm sure it will only appeal to the Elders that have used nextstep and similar UIs.

ReCursing, a linux en Two new Linux desktops, one with deep roots, come to Debian [Lomiri and GSDE]
@ReCursing@kbin.social avatar

I ran Windowmaker as my primary WM for many years back in the day. now I run KDE, but as a holdover I want the primary taskbar vertical rather than horizontal. GSDE is somewhat interesting for that reason but I doubt I'll actually install it for quite some time yet, I've got comfy with KDE

gnuplusmatt, a linux en Will Flatpak and Snap replace desktop Linux native apps?

Kinoite user here, the majority of my desktop apps are in flatpaks already. I have a couple of things in toolbox/distrobox containers

eltimablo,

I've also been on immutable Fedora for a while, and the biggest complaint I have is that I need to reboot after removing software from the base system. Otherwise I quite like Flatpak for the ability to set granular permissions per app. KDE even has Flatseal built into the settings app now, which is super nice.

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