I ran cloc on the comm-central repository and got the following:
6622 text files.
6369 unique files.
1761 files ignored.
github.com/AlDanial/cloc v 1.68 T=19.10 s (254.7 files/s, 62548.9 lines/s)
---
Legimet, I thought openhub list the **total and exact** amount of LOC of a
package.
Read my comment again. The comm-central repository (which openhub is looking
at for Seamonkey) does not contain the Gecko code, which has to be fetched
from the mozilla-central repository (the Firefox one). I don't doubt that
Seamonkey is less bloated but it's not 20x less code.
14017563 / 693285 = 20
https://www.openhub.net/p/firefox
https://www.openhub.net/p/seamonkey
If the openhub website gets it, the math gets it.
If you like functional and smooth, if you don't like bloat, the monkey will
be very good to you :)
I think the 20x number is wrong. The repository for Seamonkey does not
contain the Gecko code, and you have to checkout the main Mozilla repo (in
addition to the Seamonkey/Thunderbird one) to build Seamonkey from Mercurial.
Hmm?? I can not see how can a kerel update fix a browser not playing webm..
x_X
but, good for you :)
***SOLVED***
Hi all,
The issue went away after I manually updated the kernel (
https://trisquel.info/en/wiki/update-linux-libre-kernel )
Life is back to normal - yay :-)
Legimet, all the useless anti-feature crappy bloat inserted by FF in the last
4 years is not in the monkey. Yes, the monkey is the direct descendant of the
Netscape suite, it has a lot more functionality but 20 times (yes, twenty)
less lines of code. On my 2004 laptop FF opens in 30 seconds,
I never tried Seamonkey, although I vaguely remember using the Mozilla Suite
a long time ago. It's funny that Seamonkey would be less bloated than Firefox
despite having more functionality. I use Iceweasel (actually, Firefox +
Iceweasel branding extension) and it works well for me, but I
As an extra suggestion: Try switching from TinyTinyRSS to another feed
reader, like Liferea, that's already installed on your copy of Trisquel
(it can be found on Main menu → Internet → "Liferea news reader" or
something similar).
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> I would recommend not to use IceCat. It doesn't receive timely security
updates, and is at version 38.8.0, which has been unsupported for months.
Same for Seamonkey, but fortunately you can download the latest aurora build,
which is FF 51 (minus the bloat).
vry interesting... I just downloaded seamonkey 2.40 64 bit version, but
didn't install the noscript add-on.
seamonkey crashed on loading jnnp.bmj.com :/
on the other hand, googlemaps loaded just fine mysteries of nature...
I would recommend not to use IceCat. It doesn't receive timely security
updates, and is at version 38.8.0, which has been unsupported for months.
The neuro surgery site works fine for me (js disabled).
I use noscript to block all scripts (and several other possible issues -
noscript is not only a script blocker, it is much more).
Update: just started using Tor Browser directly from Tor Project's website;
works like a charm, no crashes... maybe I will just forget about
IceCat/abrowser and only use Tor Browser from now on ;)
Thank you, I appreciate the input.
Trying to clarify:
- I do not have add-ons installed; I used the "disable javascript" feature
from abrowser itself (from about:home)... I don't have LibreJS installed.
- Even though openstreetmap is an alternative, I am still unable to open
JNNP's website.
Sometimes LibreJS addon crash some browsers. I never could to get acceptable
performance with LibreJS, I tryed it on Abrowser, IceCat, Iceweasel. I use
NoScript.
Update:
- abrowser had no add-ons installed.
- I completely uninstalled abrowser+icecat; sudo apt-get update, update,
autoremove.
- rebooted, installed just abrowser and rebooted.
- tried the fresh installation of abrowser; websites mentioned continue
crashing.
- I then checked the
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