I've been using Palemoon, built with gcc/6.40-r1, for about a month now with
only two crashes that I can think of. Otherwise it has been doing everything I
need in a browser and I'm very happy with it. I still keep Firefox around, but
rarely fire it up anymore.
I am curious, however, what the Palemoon devs will do once support for
gcc/6.4.0 is dropped, as it straight-up won't let me build Palemoon with
anything newer. I guess a person could just use the pre-built binaries from the
"palemoon" overlay, but I've been building it from source from the "octopus"
overlay.
On 04/01/2018 05:26 PM, Ian Zimmerman wrote:
On 2018-04-01 16:29, Martin Vaeth wrote:
An alarm sign for me was that palemoon was eventually dropped for
android after being practically unmaintained (i.e. with known open
security holes) for months/years. A similar alarm sign concerning
linux is that they were not able to pull the fixes for the assembler
code which relied on undocumented behaviour of <=gcc-5, even months
after gcc-7 was out. Even if these problems are not marked as
"security" issues, they can easily be some.
WTH is even assembly code _doing_ in a browser?? That is insane.
now that I know this is the reason why palemoon needs gcc 4, I will
definitely look into it more closely.
Experience shows that it is not possible to "hide":
Sooner or later a website you do have to use for some reason
will require such a feature. Eventually the number of these
websites increases. And then you are at a dead end.
Nowadays, it has already "practically" become impossible to
use exclusively lynx or (e)links; in a while it will be impossible
to use a browser which does not support certain new "features".
You know the economist Keynes quote about "the long run". Applies quite
well here.