Apk for android is available with the link
Wasn’t clear which link; I had to dig for it a bit. I found it here: https://github.com/nobelization/panoramax-mobile-app/releases/tag/release-beta
Apk for android is available with the link
Wasn’t clear which link; I had to dig for it a bit. I found it here: https://github.com/nobelization/panoramax-mobile-app/releases/tag/release-beta
It’s also clearly still in development and doesn’t really work well yet, so while fun, probably not something you’ll want to use yet. It’s not even at the point where reporting bugs makes sense.
Yes, every browser caches resources that multiple pages of the same site use, unless the site instructs them not too.
It is also the case that almost every modern browser does not share those caches between different websites, to avoid providing a mechanism for them to share data. This means that for websites, it is no longer beneficial to use CDNs, if it ever was - in practice, it was also the case that only very few CDN resources were actually shared between different websites (since they all depended on different versions or different CDNs).
The best thing you can do is not mess with the settings and leave them at the defaults, otherwise the mere fact of some data not being available already makes you stand out, in addition to breaking some websites.
It’s on the roadmap, though I imagine doing it properly is going to take a while - the test build was very rough, just to verify whether it was even realistic.
As @denschub@schub.social always emphasises: make sure to file a report at https://webcompat.com!
We ask everyone to file their reports, because all reports are really useful. Even if we don’t respond to every single thing you report, it’s a signal that we’re processing in many different ways. (…) please, keep reporting all issues you see, because every single blip counts!
https://www.reddit.com/r/firefox/comments/1de7bu1/comment/l8ghtr2/
Was also asked about and answered in the recent AMA on reddit:
Unfortunately I have the same symptoms you do… On GNOME.
It doesn’t always happen, but every now and then the system will get into a state that suspend doesn’t work.
It means that on systems with apps installed written with libadwaita, will also have libadwaita installed, rather than just GTK. But those apps will look like GNOME apps, which might look out of place on e.g. a Windows or Xfce desktop.
Yep, see https://relay.firefox.com/faq/#phone-masking-faq-question-how-many.
(Unfortunately, phone numbers are expensive, whereas email addresses are not.)
It’s VoIP-based, so yes, there are acceptance issues. Also good to be aware of: as opposed to the email masking, you get just a single phone number (more would be too expensive).
Still, kinda wish I could use it here outside the US.
It’s a known issue: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1851083
There’s somewhat of a workaround there, but hopefully it’ll just get resolved properly soon.
Haha I appreciate the candor!
Seems like a bit of an overreaction. From what I can see, it’s mostly that Ubuntu don’t seem confident enough to ship this without more rigorous testing (i.e. they think it might introduce other/more severe bugs), so they want resume doing that testing before shipping it. Doesn’t really seem harmful to anyone that didn’t explicitly choose to use Ubuntu.
If it works anything like Firefox Translations does, the model is only downloaded on-demand, so it wouldn’t affect your browser usage if you don’t use the feature.
What if the AI doesn’t activate unless you explicitly choose to do so?
You could try Menu -> Help -> Troubleshoot Mode. That will restart Firefox without extensions and such - if the problem then disappears, it’s probably caused by one of them.
there’s no user behaviour tracking
I mean, that depends on how you define user behaviour. It tracks which packages are frequently installed, for example, or how often people install Ubuntu in the first place. All of which I think is pretty legit, in my opinion, since that only involves aggregate user statistics that help prioritise work and detect common problems - but that’s essentially what Firefox is doing too.
Debian is a great example of relatively commonly used free software that doesn’t really collect data btw.
What is it with this obsession with JPEG-XL? I keep seeing it mentioned on lots of threads, but as a user, the benefits seem marginal? Like: would be nice, but I’d expect more significant benefits from something that’s brought up this often - so which benefits am I missing?