Hello, On Wed, 26 Sep 2018, Istvan Gabor wrote:
On Wed, 26 Sep 2018 00:49:51 +0200, David Haller wrote:
On Tue, 25 Sep 2018, Istvan Gabor wrote: [..] https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/downloads/file/722227/screengrab_fix_vers...
Thanks!!!
;)
And just ignore those that don't get that version 2.x does not work with seamonkey (as exemplified by the missing "sm" in the link for
https://addons.mozilla.org/firefox/downloads/file/733683/screengrab_fix_vers...
I did know that it (version 0.99.12) worked because I'd had it installed previously in seamonkey - and it worked.
Also it has the 'sm' in the xpi-name, 2.x doesn't (what's "an"?, "fx" is FF) [..]
Bloody idjit effers at mozilla. I HATE the FF UI!
[Note: I've not found _ONE_ other modern GUI browser besides SM to have an acceptable UI, FF is actually somewhat useable of sorts if you're in a pinch.]
I refuse to use any browser which has google chrome-like interface, including google chrome/chromium, firefox > 29.x (australlis ui) etc.
Mostly I use palemoon which also kept/keeps legacy ui layout and Seamonkey.
Hm. I checked that once, I guess I should look at it again ;)
Seamonkey with Prefbar, UMatrix, Scriptish (aka GreaseMonkey / UserMonkey) ruled! Sadly, Prefbar was not ported. It's soooo convenient to just add a checkbox to prefbar for e.g. JS, CSS, broken SSL/TLS ciphers for broken sites, or dropdowns for language, UA and window-size... and whatever else you might want to toggle/change in about:config and more.
I don't know these but I will check them.
Prefbar sadly only works with the old XUL-Extension-API...
ONCE AGAIN: Only enable (whitelist) JS and stuff _IF YOU REALLY HAVE TO_...
How do I whitelist/blacklist sites for JS in Seamonkey?
By using NoScript / UMatrix to generally block all JS and then whitelist those sites that one uses regularly (and then only those scripts that are actually needed, i.e. no trackers, no ads etc.). With UMatrix you can also allow/block cookies, images, CSS, AJAX, frames and other stuff in a matrix on a server-level. It's a bit "overwhelming" at first glance, but it's quite practical once you understood the basic principle.
I know how to enable/disable JS in preferences but it is quite tedious to change it. Old opera (12.x) had a button for switching JS on/off, and it could added to the toolbar
Prefbar has (had) a prefabbed checkbox for JS, cookies, images, and more ;) And even if not it was easy to add stuff. HTH, -dnh -- I believe the technical term is "Oops!" -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org