I use Brave as a secondary browser for PWAs on the desktop. I wish Firefox would support it again.
I use Brave as a secondary browser for PWAs on the desktop. I wish Firefox would support it again.
There is a FAQ about the Mullvad browser on the Tor Project’s website, which gives a few more details.
For shells (and other programs) using GNU readline for interactions and line-edits (like bash), some of this can be achieved with an ~/.inputrc
configuration file, e.g., mapping the correct key sequence for your terminal emulator to the backward-word
move command. You can look up these sequences using infocmp -L1
or interactively using sed -n l
.
Most other shells use their own command line handling routines and configuration though, so this won’t work for e.g., zsh or fish.
C:\con\con
A self-hosted instance of miniflux. After trying several other options over the years, I settled on this one.
I tend to use Firefox’s “Inspect” context menu entry on the element and disable the paste/keydown/keyup event listeners in the element inspector.
There is a bugzilla entry that states the removal was due to too little user benefit for the development effort required. And since I don’t necessarily need this feature, I can understand they directed the resources to where they are needed more. Nevertheless, it would be nice to have.
The way I use it is primarily for applications that produce audio output, so I get appropriately named per-app volume sliders in pulseaudio/pipewire and not just a bunch of audio streams titled “Firefox”.