Zenaan Harkness wrote:
I need a sane webbrowser.
Firstly, I'm not interested in rolling releases. In my experience,
Firefox 3.6 was the pinnacle in browsers, in the days when Epiphany
was also a fine option. Things appear to have gone downhill bigtime
since then, as far as I can tell.
Seeking
On 2013-03-10 04:03, Zenaan Harkness wrote:
Sorry, sorry, I'm ranting again! I promise I'll keep it to browsers.
There are plenty of other threads we_could_ create.
I use Firefox. Why?
Because I use Thunderbird and I'd rather not load WebKit for another purpse.
What I mean is I want to keep
Zenaan Harkness schreef:
I need a sane webbrowser.
Firstly, I'm not interested in rolling releases. In my experience,
Firefox 3.6 was the pinnacle in browsers, in the days when Epiphany
was also a fine option. Things appear to have gone downhill bigtime
since then, as far as I can tell.
try seamonkey (mozilla-branch) i use it to my needs (browsing and mailing)
for years without any trouble.
Thanks guys, I forgot about seamonkey.
Found iceape. Will give it a try.
Very much appreciate the pointer/reminder,
Zenaan
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On Sat, Mar 9, 2013 at 11:44 PM, Jude DaShiell jdash...@shellworld.net wrote:
the seamonkey package may be what you're looking for. It combines firefox
with thunderbird in a single package and uses less system resources. It
also doesn't update constantly either.
Technically, it does not
Hi
On 10/03/13 01:03:53, Zenaan Harkness wrote:
I need a sane webbrowser.
...
What I've tried:
...
* Epiphany
Epiphany. How I loved epiphany back in the days of Gnome 2 and
Firefox
3.5, when I took a walk on the wild side of Ubuntu, and settled in on
Ubuntu 8.04.
Firefox 3.6
On 3/11/13, Karl E. k...@jorgensen.org.uk wrote:
On 10/03/13 01:03:53, Zenaan Harkness wrote:
I need a sane webbrowser.
...
* Epiphany
Epiphany. How I loved epiphany back in the days of Gnome 2 and
Firefox
3.5, when I took a walk on the wild side of Ubuntu, and settled in on
Ubuntu 8.04.
On Sun, Mar 10, 2013 at 12:03:53PM +1100, Zenaan Harkness wrote:
I need a sane webbrowser.
Firstly, I'm not interested in rolling releases. In my experience,
Firefox 3.6 was the pinnacle in browsers, in the days when Epiphany
was also a fine option. Things appear to have gone downhill
I need a sane webbrowser.
Firstly, I'm not interested in rolling releases. In my experience,
Firefox 3.6 was the pinnacle in browsers, in the days when Epiphany
was also a fine option. Things appear to have gone downhill bigtime
since then, as far as I can tell.
Seeking something that is 100%
Update:
* Google Chromium
This does not appear (in an hour of usage) to have the CPU-spikes
problem of iceweasel/firefox.
Performance is fine on my modern laptop.
Tabs work; CTRL-PgUp/Dn works.
Has private browsing mode. I'm hoping proxy settings are remembered.
Only downer is: does not
On Sat, Mar 9, 2013 at 10:35 PM, Zenaan Harkness z...@freedbms.net wrote:
Update:
* Google Chromium
This does not appear (in an hour of usage) to have the CPU-spikes
problem of iceweasel/firefox.
Performance is fine on my modern laptop.
Tabs work; CTRL-PgUp/Dn works.
Has private browsing
On 3/10/13, Patrick Wiseman pwise...@gmail.com wrote:
On Sat, Mar 9, 2013 at 10:35 PM, Zenaan Harkness z...@freedbms.net wrote:
Update:
* Google Chromium
..
Only downer is: does not integrate with standard (XFCE) style
desktop/windows theme - ie Windows XP style windows theme. Chromium
the seamonkey package may be what you're looking for. It combines firefox
with thunderbird in a single package and uses less system resources. It
also doesn't update constantly either.
---
jude jdash...@shellworld.net
Hi
Following excellent advice here recently, I used update-alternatives to
make sure firefox is the system default web browser. AFAICT this is
working fine.
The problem arises in mutt. If I right-click on a link within an email,
firefox will launch and display the page.
However, if I receive
[03/08/2005 -- 19:34u] Clive Menzies:
The mutt manual refers to adding:
macro index \cb |urlview\n
macro pager \cb |urlview\n
to the .muttrc file but this has no noticeable effect.
It should make up a list of URLs contained in the message, each of which
you can view with the default browser
On (03/08/05 19:54), Tom wrote:
[03/08/2005 -- 19:34u] Clive Menzies:
The mutt manual refers to adding:
macro index \cb |urlview\n
macro pager \cb |urlview\n
to the .muttrc file but this has no noticeable effect.
It should make up a list of URLs contained in the message, each of which
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