• @[email protected]
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    422 days ago

    lol I was so confused by Firefox not needing to restart that I tried running update again and then closed it myself because I thought something went wrong

  • @[email protected]
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    2 days ago

    Good to know that I am not the only one mistaking Cr1TiKaL aka MoistCr1TiKaL aka penguinz0 aka Charles Christopher White Jr. as Asmongold aka Zack Hoyt (the rightwing influencer).

  • macniel
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    1803 days ago

    that forced restart is probably going to be a huge win for our rolling release brothers and sisters.

    • Ephera
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      453 days ago

      I believe, Firefox bugfix releases get rolled out pretty quickly on most non-rolling distros, too, so I don’t think it’s a terribly different experience, unless you’re on a distro with Firefox ESR, like e.g. Debian.

      • @[email protected]
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        63 days ago

        Can you expand on this a little for a new guy who is considering a switch from Mint to Debian?

        In my understanding Firefox ESR is like a stable, longstanding version that doesn’t get frequent little updates but still gets occasional large updates. (Like 1.0, 1.1, etc. rather than 1.0, 1.0.1, 1.0.2, etc.)

        Is there a measurable difference in the user experience and or security of ESR?

        And is Debian actually restricted to ESR?

        • Ephera
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          143 days ago

          Sure. Here’s a high-level page which I’ll be kind of going off of: https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/choosing-firefox-update-channel

          But basically, Firefox ESR (“Extended Support Release”) means that you still get security fixes in a timely manner, but feature updates are delayed. Firefox normally gets feature updates every 4 weeks, whereas ESR averages one (larger) feature update per year. You might know such a model as LTS (“Long-Term Support”) release from other software.

          Essentially, the current ‘normal’ Firefox version is 141.0, whereas the ESR version is 128.13.0.
          Mozilla does maintain a separate changelog for ESR, but basically it’s as if from 129.0 onwards, you only included the “Fixed”, none of the “New” or “Changed” stuff.

          The next ESR will be based off of Firefox 140, as can be seen in their release calendar, so this change that OP praises here will not make it into ESR for another year or so.

          And then you gotta also pay the Debian toll, which is that they won’t upgrade to the newest ESR right away either. 😅
          Mozilla actually still maintains the Firefox ESR based on version 115, which is about to be discontinued with the new ESR major release.
          Debian will typically maintain the ESR even beyond that (Firefox is open-source, so they can retrofit patches themselves), because they have an even longer support lifecycle for their OS release. But I believe, if you always upgrade to the newest Debian release as they make them available, you should be covered by the Mozilla-supported ESR at all times.

          If you do not want to pay the Debian toll (not just for Firefox, but any software where you care about new features), then Flatpaks are typically the solution of choice. It’s a different way of installing software, which allows you to get the newest version, independent from what Debian is doing.

          But back to the normal Debian experience. How does it affect the user experience for Firefox? Well, we’ve already covered that others may be happy about new features when you’ve gotta take solace in your disgustingly stable software.
          These feature updates also include the newest support for web standards, so it’s theoretically possible that a webpage doesn’t work right in ESR. In practice, I don’t think this happens very often, because webdevs can’t use the newest web standards right away anyways. There’s always gonna be users on old browsers or there’s whole browsers which don’t support the new stuff right away.

          How does it affect security? Generally, ESR is secure. Occasionally, the feature updates might introduce security-relevant stuff, too, like when they switched to the multi-process architecture, that brought along much better isolation and you can’t just retrofit that into ESR. But yeah, this isn’t the norm. You shouldn’t be particularly worried about security. You do get the normal patches in a timely manner.


          Well, and to infodump a little more, you could also take a look at Linux Mint Debian Edition. It’s Linux Mint, but instead of Ubuntu underneath, it’s Debian underneath.
          Ubuntu is actually itself based on Debian, so I’ve heard LMDE described as “What does basing it on Ubuntu even add? LMDE feels exactly the same as normal Linux Mint.”.
          Of course, if you’re switching because you want to try something different, that would be counterproductive. 🫠

          • @[email protected]
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            53 days ago

            Thanks so much for the informative and detailed reply. That pretty much answers every question.

            Thanks also for the tip about LMDE. I actually really like Mint, I’m only switching because it’s the only distro I’ve tried and I feel like I should shop around a bit. Going to Debian because while starting my journey I want to shop around with things that work, rather than having to learn how to tinker all at once just to get things running. But if I decide I need Mint back I’ll probably check out LMDE for the hell of it.

        • @[email protected]
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          3 days ago

          I don’t know how the timing of each release is planned but the Firefox website gives instructions for using the repositories for esr, beta, nightly, or dev edition.

          Using Debian as your distro doesn’t lock you into firefox ESR.

    • @[email protected]
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      3 days ago

      Why?

      Does one reboot their entire system after updating Firefox on Linux?

      I never do. I don’t even restart Firefox after updating, if it is already running.

      • Eugene V. Debs' Ghost
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        313 days ago

        I never do. I don’t even restart Firefox after updating, if it is already running.

        Clearly you don’t use it often, firefox will force you to restart itself and refuse to render webpages.

        • @[email protected]
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          13 days ago

          I guess I am lucky that it does not refuse to work since it is my default browser across all my machines.

          • @[email protected]
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            102 days ago

            Linux machines?

            Because on my Linux machines, once it’s been updated, I can not open a new tab, it’ll tell me to frig off and restart. I can click links in existing tabs, and might’ve been possible to enter a new URL in an existing tab, I don’t recall exactly.

      • Ephera
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        82 days ago

        On Linux:

        • an application’s files can be updated while the application is running, and
        • there’s an OS-wide updater (i.e. package manager) with which you can update most software, including Firefox. (You can also get Firefox with its built-in auto-updater, but most people prefer the OS-wide updater.)

        Both of these are good things. But Firefox, with its relatively advanced multi-process architecture, had a problem here, because it could happen that its files got updated while it was running and then when it started a new process, this new process might be incompatible with the old processes, therefore unable to communicate correctly.

        Their initial solution was to force you to quit Firefox and reopen it, when they detected that the files had changed and you did something in Firefox which might need a new process, so primarily when opening a new tab.

        I’m guessing, they now implemented a way to launch the new process by still using the old files from before the update.

          • @[email protected]
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            93 days ago

            I think some servers have an actual DE and all. If I remember correctly, I’ve seen centos with gnome.

            • @[email protected]
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              53 days ago

              I installed a DE on my server, I just disable sddm unless I need to do something in a web browser on that machine. I haven’t needed to yet, but I have it just in case.

        • exu
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          72 days ago

          It really shouldn’t though. Reboot your servers

        • randint
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          33 days ago

          Very true. I used to poweroff my laptop every day, but now, after getting into servers, I sometimes leave my laptop up overnight (even though the laptop isn’t the server)

      • @[email protected]
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        23 days ago

        I’ve got a super ignorant question; Is the situation with session saving on Linux desktop environments with default settings finally locked in enough that you literally can’t tell when a reboot has happened once the session is restored? Including user space apps? _Redacted_OS has been so good at this for so long that I literally don’t think about uptime on my daily driver anymore.

        • @[email protected]
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          42 days ago

          I’m on KDE and I’m not doing anything special regarding this, and for me the answer to this question “somewhat”. I specifically hate when apps are starting by themselves so they don’t do for me and I’m happy about it. But when I turn on most apps that I use they open in the state I closed them in.

        • @[email protected]
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          02 days ago

          no, at least not if you’re doing anything with poorly supported hardware with it’s own configuration tools that reset when it loses power (it is powered when the computer is on but sometimes stays powered through reboots)

  • @[email protected]
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    112 days ago

    I miss the days when it was normal to just shut down the pc when you were done with it. Leaving things on all of the time isn’t healthy.

    • thermal_shock
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      23 hours ago

      Fully disagree. Just leave it on, restart it once every 7-10 days if you’re using windows. Linux, reboot when it asks, could be months.

    • @[email protected]
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      62 days ago

      When I finish what I want to do on my PC, I type “yay” enjoy text and pacmans going left to right, press enter some times, and type sudo pw some times.
      After that I reboot to check, that I am not stuck in TTY and turn off after

    • @[email protected]
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      142 days ago

      It’s healthier for the hardware to just leave it running then turning it off and on all the time.

      We ain’t in the days of mechanical moving parts anymore. Idle time is way less of a problem then power ons.

    • @[email protected]
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      32 days ago

      I leave my work machine on constantly, but am very careful and shut down my home machine when I go to bed.

      It just feels wrong to leave it powered up.

    • @[email protected]
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      52 days ago

      I always turn computer off when done, it never sleeps or hibernates, no need since I’m either using it or not, through been leaving it on 24/7 at moment due to wiping some hard drives which takes time, so it’s working which is fine 😬

  • Lucy :3
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    WHAT??? ALL OF THOSE FEATURES HAVE BEEN IN NIGHTLY FOR A MONTH AND I STILL ALWAYS RESTART IT OUT OF HABIT! IT’S LITERALLY PART OF MY ROUTINE AND NOW YOU TELL ME IT DOESN’T NEED TO BE ANYMORE?

    • @[email protected]
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      743 days ago

      Watch out, we got a badass over here. Running a nightly build and not reading the patch notes, so brave.

      • Lucy :3
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        73 days ago

        Sometimes I’m too tired and/or lazy to read through dozens of commits on their repo

          • Lucy :3
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            23 days ago

            Why tho? I never complained about the way it is, I use testing/nightly/beta/alpha everywhere and I rarely have problems. Also with FF. I was more ranting about myself not realizing that the requirement was gone, considering I, multiple times, upgraded and then e.g. opened a few tabs after, which usually prompted for a restart. And in the end, it’s not gonna change anything, as the point of nightly is to catch any bugs and instabilities, which would very likely only occur after a restart of FF.

        • @[email protected]
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          Oh yeah, I live dangerously too. If it breaks, I can fix it and the total effort of fixing the random problems that happen is less than I would spend reading patch notes.

          But, we got newbies here and we gotta teach 'em right from wrong.

          • Lucy :3
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            33 days ago

            99% of problems I have with arch testing can be resolved by simply downgrading a package, if I can’t fix it by any other means

    • hazel
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      93 days ago

      AND THE BEST PART IS THAT YOU STILL CAN RESTART IT IF YOU WANT TO! WELCOME TO THE FUTURE, LUCY!

  • hazel
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    293 days ago

    Charlie’s still using that gamer version of Opera though. With the fake key stroke sounds enabled.

  • @[email protected]
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    343 days ago

    How was memory use actually reduced? I read several articles on this, but I didn’t see anyone talking about how they achieved this.

  • @[email protected]
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    473 days ago

    Getting rid of that forced restart will at least help me personally stay more secure and get bug fixes faster

    • lime!
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      393 days ago

      by the way some people talk here you’d think “telemetry” was a synonym to “satanism”.

      telemetry is not automatically evil.

        • lime!
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          63 days ago

          since 99% of users never touch a single setting on their computers, being opt-in makes telemetry functionally useless.

        • @[email protected]
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          3 days ago

          and if there were laws with actual penalties which ensured that it was only used for providing the service and not assimilated into a data broker database so that their clients can guess which shampoo I’m going to buy or which brown people they can kidnap.

          A man can dream

            • @[email protected]
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              22 days ago

              The vast majority of progress on privacy rights and electronics regulation for the US Consumer is because of EU regulations.

              We’re unlikely to see any progress domestically anytime soon.

    • @[email protected]
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      503 days ago

      Or you can just opt out if you don’t think Mozilla should have this data which is strictly about the browser and whether it’s the default browser, and which in no way compromises any personal info.

      Just because something uses telemetry doesn’t mean it’s used in a way that compromises your personal data.
      Google, Microsoft, Facebook and many others do that, Mozilla/Firefox does not.

      • @[email protected]
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        153 days ago

        FF in my experience respects settings too. MS straight up ignores or resets them silently, and Google goes full dark patterns and/or creates new settings to nickel and dime you on data

        Facebook no experience, dumped that shit in like 09

        • @[email protected]
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          13 days ago

          MS straight up ignores or resets them silently

          That was the thing that bothered me the most. Sure I could go through every subsystem individually and make the changes to make the system more private and secure. That would take a while to do manually, or use one of the tools that do this. But, every time anything has an update you can’t trust that it didn’t reset a setting.

          Running the tool after every update is annoying and after a while it just got frustrating to see settings, that I know I’ve disabled (because, the tool does it every time), which are now re-activated thanks to an update.

          It’s just scummy behavior.

          • @[email protected]
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            22 days ago

            When I installed win10 it straight up ignored every single choice I made in the oobe. It may as well have not existed

      • @[email protected]
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        43 days ago

        You probably missed the news. But Firefox is becoming a data seller too.

        Recently they updated their policies, since they are on GitHub you can see the exact changes.

        One of them was the elimination of a phrase like “we won’t sell your data, and that’s a promise”. So promise broken I guess.

        • @[email protected]
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          You probably missed the news.

          No I did not, but did you ever stop to wonder why there is so much anti Firefox propaganda, as Google is trying to prevent ad-blockers?

          Manage technical and interaction data collection settings in Firefox:
          https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/technical-and-interaction-data

          What is technical and interaction data?:
          https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/technical-and-interaction-data#w_what-is-technical-and-interaction-data

          information about how Firefox functions on your device and how you use its features. This includes performance details like page load times, and memory usage, as well as insights into which Firefox features you interact with, such as bookmarks, tabs or settings. Additionally, it collects general device information, including your operating system, browser version and hardware specifications. Mozilla uses this data to enhance Firefox while respecting your privacy.

          There is zero, zip, zilch, nada personalo info collected.
          So please point out to me which of these it is that worries you?
          Also please point out which of these it is you think Mozilla would be able to sell?

          Firefox is becoming a data seller too.

          I think that technically that is libel!

          • @[email protected]
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            22 days ago

            It is not propaganda as it is factual information. If you believe this is 4D chess from Google to manipulate us to dislike Firefox you are out of your mind. https://github.com/mozilla/bedrock/commit/d459addab846d8144b61939b7f4310eb80c5470e this is an actual commit made by mozilla. It was not made by Google.

            Changes include:

            • Removing “we don’t sell access to your data”. Curiously this change is only for the TOU. Presumable because that is legally binding. Idk where the “else” branch is displayed though.
            • Removing this question from FAQ: “Does Firefox sell your personal data? Nope. Never has, never will (…). That’s a promise”
            • Remove another mention in the TOU “and we don’t sell your personal data”. That again was not removed from the “else” branch

            That to me indicates one of the following:

            • They have started selling data.
            • They plan on selling data in the near future.
            • They don’t feel confident that they can keep that promise forever. That is, they see a future where they sell data.

            I don’t like either of those alternatives.

            I don’t know if they are able to sell the data you mentioned. Because I’m not in the enshittification minds of giant American corporations. 20 years ago people would laugh at the idea of buying data about the screen size of a user. But now they do, and use it for fingerprinting. If recent history has shown anything is that most data has some kind of value. And giant corporations will find their way to use that data against users.

            I’ve seen way too many companies that were supposed to be the cool kids and were doing everything morally enshittify. There’s no reason to believe Mozilla is going to be different. They’re showing the same signs.

            • @[email protected]
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              2 days ago

              I never claimed they didn’t remove those lines.
              But your screen size is NOT personal info.

              Also this line was in my previous post:

              Mozilla uses this data to enhance Firefox while respecting your privacy.

              So how do you imagine selling personal data is respecting privacy?
              Again what you are doing could be libel, you have zero evidence to back up your claim, it’s pure speculation.

    • @[email protected]
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      23 days ago

      I thought they specifically take anti-fingerprinting measures by default? Is this not true?

      • Jean-luc Peak-hard
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        63 days ago

        They do, but just like anything dealing with security or privacy, there are degrees of inconvenience and “breaking” that are not suited for every situation.

        Firefox is a good default, but if you want more privacy, LibreWolf is an option. LibreWolf configures more settings by default to protect your privacy— but these come at a cost. The cost being that more websites are likely to break and/or need “fixing”. Look at the list of features that LibreWolf may break here [0]. This is not a browser for your general family or someone who just wants things to “work”.

        Interestingly, LibreWolf disable Google Safe Browsing, which they actually recommend you enable as Firefox has implemented it in a privacy preserving way. The devs disable it by default in LibrewWolf for a semi-technical reason [1]. Without Google Safe Browsing you will not get warned about dangerous sites known for phishing, malware, or unwanted software. Technically inclined people may not want this, but I would never disable this feature for friends/family as that would put them at risk.

        Lastly, if your friends/family ran into website that doesn’t work, they will not be troubleshooting the problem or trying to find a workaround. They will uninstall the browser and go running back to Chrome- this is the fine line that Firefox needs to navigate to ensure they protect user privacy, but don’t inconvenience those who don’t have the technical chops or patience.

        [0] https://librewolf.net/docs/faq/#what-are-the-most-common-downsides-of-rfp-resist-fingerprinting

        [1] https://librewolf.net/docs/faq/#why-do-you-disable-google-safe-browsing

  • @[email protected]
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    42 days ago

    to be fair, i thought asmongold and penguinz0 were the same person, and that cr1tikal was a seperate, equally shit-headed person. My poor brain-- so the “woo lets go baby” guy is a decent dude? and its the other guy that has a rat corpse alarm clock? or am i still confused?

      • @[email protected]
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        11 day ago

        The differences are astonishing Asmongold is pretty much a gaming and bad takes second hand streamer. Whose only identity is kissing right wing politician’s ass, even when they actively hate and attack him.

        Then Charlie is there with movie and music credits, anime and comics productions, podcasts, business ventures, and also streaming. With every single of his political takes and controversies being morally and ethically sound and consistent.

        They are like Superman and bizarro, mirror images of each other, similar but opposites at the same time.

        Oh, and asswithmold face is the most punchable face on the internet (second only to PirateSoftware’s) while Charlie’s is sculpted by the gods themselves.

  • Phoenixz
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    183 days ago

    I swear to God, if I ever have to restart my Firefox again because snap without asking updated Firefox again in secret, I’m going to fucking lose it…

  • @[email protected]
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    42 days ago

    Great and all, but until it can play full screen video on my Pi5 I’m going to keep using Brave.