You can have an opinion on that all you like, but what I do, or don’t do, is still in my very own secret PS: Please don’t concern yourself regarding the topics I am interested in, or which companies I personally trust or distrust, how I phrase my stuff, how often I write something… It’s none of your business. So what do you want me to say here? Chromium (aside from Vivaldi) is not for people searching for customization, it was not built for that use case – however most people also don’t have such a use case. Doesn’t mean your use case is invalid, it just means that not many people actually have such a use case, hence the distribution of market share. It doesn’t meet your expectations? Not good, but that’s a niche use case, then. Its low market share indicates that people like other browsers more and are happy with them, so obviously, Chromium is not “bad” for the majority of people. After all, it is available for free, so anyone with an Internet-capable device who wants to use it, actually could. If Firefox were so great, more people would use it. > Anyways, all this talk about Chromium being superior and I’m yet to see anything factual and conclusive about it other than the marketshare being higher. Each browser has strengths and weaknesses. Use what suits you best, this is literally the best recommendation anyone can give. My use case is not identical with other use cases and I never claimed such. has custom shortcuts and other customization options). Those are not things that concern me, but if they are a concern to you, then please use something else, e.g. > Firefox is way easier to navigate (about pages, keyboard shortcuts, buttons) and just much better looking in general. I am happy with Chromium’s interface + privacy protections, so I am using Brave. I think Brave team pretty much covered all non-breaking changes one can introduce well.Īlso please understand, I think Brave is the best browser for my own use case(!), that doesn’t mean it has to be good (enough) for anyone else. You can achieve even more extreme setups with Firefox, but only by sacrificing web compatibility at the same time. There is a documentation of what they change:įor the rest that is not covered, Brave’s settings and chrome://flags suffices, as far as I’m concerned. Brave already has sane privacy settings by default, there is no need to toggle as much. – Your most used should be opened from bookmark bar-U can manually(r.Said is pretty much spot on. =read we are paid for propagating that -just like google pays to mozilla – officially for default search engine + google safe browsing. Spycial FBIbook and so on icons on spydial in default -even if you one time (or never) opened it – “most users want that”= To disable it again at a later time, perform the same operation and make sure the value of the parameter is set to false in the end.ġ) (less important) : a bit slowering new tab opening/loadingĢ) distract user eyes and mind = drag your thoughts to them =ģ) why should I have preloaded lets say x number of my most used sites – if i daily at FF session open not always the same 5 or 10 sites but 50-100 mostly different ….Ĥ ) I can’t prove it ,but my guts tell me – such a preloaded mechanism is/can be /will be(exploited 4) open gate for spying/data miningĥ ) it’s aim is= practically lead to hipnotising sppl to using less sites = more % of time on them -to shrink their minds- simplicity is debilitating , To enable it load about:config in the browser, filter for here and double-click the entry to set it to true to enable it. The feature has landed in Firefox 17 in form of a preference that is disabled by default. If it's not loaded yet (which should almost never be the case) we can just not swap and let the new tab load normally. When another tab is opened we just swap again because the previous tab should now be loaded in the background. The user can now interact with the instantly loaded tab or just navigate away. The solution preloads part of the data in the background so that it takes less time to render the new tab page.Ī simple idea would be to preload the newtab page in the background and when gBrowser.addTab() is called move the newly loading docShell to the background and swap it with the preloaded docShell. Mozilla in Firefox 17 - that is the current Nightly version of the web browser - has implemented a change that should improve the performance when loading the new tab page in the browser.
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