• @[email protected]
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    1615 hours ago

    Honestly, I don’t see why CSS theming is important. The customization is nice and all, but that’s not going to make people switch to Firefox. There are many other things that could be improved, like adding tab grouping. I use this extension called Tree Style Tab which I cannot live without. Firefox having something like that by default instead of an extension would be nice.

    However, having said that, OperaGX did find quite a lot of success by simply making it easy to theme the browser, so I can see where they are coming from.

    • @Olgratin_Magmatoe
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      38 hours ago

      Tree Style Tab which I cannot live without. Firefox having something like that by default instead of an extension would be nice.

      Been using TST for a while now, and I whole heartedly agree. Given that it’s essentially just some CSS, I can’t imagine that it would be difficult at all to support natively.

  • AwkwardLookMonkeyPuppet
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    1917 hours ago

    On my list of things important for the browser I use, CSS theming doesn’t even appear.

  • @[email protected]
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    391 day ago

    Anyone who thinks they know what needs to happen for Firefox to regain market share, needs to consider what would happen if someone forks Firefox and makes that happen.

    There’s no way that CSS theming is it. And in general, “not doing something” isn’t going to be it, either.

    • @[email protected]
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      -124 hours ago

      they need to offer a better alternative to Electron. once that happens, you’ll have Firefox everywhere. People will code their SPAs to run in Firefox first, recommend it to their users, and accelerate the development of better APIs.

      • @[email protected]
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        24 hours ago

        Ah, so it should just be better! I wonder why nobody thought of that yet :P

        (Sorry, I’m in a sarcastic mood, but you get my point.)

        • @[email protected]
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          223 hours ago

          oh don’t get me wrong if I had a plan for it I’d be doing it. I’ve always found it really weird given the impact that Electron had in app development, why Firefox never tried to ride that train. I know of one short lived effort to take the engine out of the browser.

          • @[email protected]
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            423 hours ago

            Usually the answer is limited resources with unclear payoff, i.e. even with Electron’s success, it’s not clear that there’s room for an alternative in the market, and it’d be a lot of effort to do.

                • im sorry i broke the code
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                  57 minutes ago

                  Tauri v2 just got released, it’s very recent and corps move slowly; besides, rewriting a project in a different framework is a major undertaking, it would be a bad idea to rewrite a major project in Tauri, which is still not as widespread. I’m unfortunate enough to have to work with Electron and Tauri greatly improves on everything that is wrong with Electron. I have no doubt that companies will begin adopt it in the following years (or a similar tool, the underlying architecture is solid).

      • @[email protected]
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        218 hours ago

        Check out Tauri, a better alternative to Electron. It avoids bundling a browser engine in the binary and relies on the OS browser engine.

  • fmstrat
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    1824 hours ago

    Only reason I use Chromium is PWAs (Web Apps). Which is why I made an extension that opens links from Chromium in Firefox.

    Got Slack running in your work profile on Chromium? Opens links in Firefox work profile.

    I should probably release this.

    • ᗪᗩᗰᑎ
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      18 hours ago

      Same here. I have to trust/use an extension and third party desktop application (Progressive Web Apps for Firefox) to get this feature to work and not have to rely on Chrome/Edge/etc.

      I can easily see less patient or understanding users dropping Firefox if they find out it doesn’t work with Progressive Web Apps.

  • @ilinamorato
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    672 days ago

    Uh, no, they definitely need tab grouping before they get into making CSS theming easier.

    • @[email protected]
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      519 hours ago

      Tab grouping is nice, but I’ve found Sidebery to meet my needs (specifically nested tab groups, and separating projects — plus it worked out of the box with Firefox Color) much better. I have it configured to automatically unload collapsed branches, which is nice as a tab hoarder, and it can fully send entire panels to your bookmarks for later usage (this is a massive performance improvement when you’re regularly opening 100–200 tabs/day per panel). A native solution, however, would be much appreciated — as long as there’s a way to nest tab groups and unload their contents.

      • @[email protected]
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        116 hours ago

        I went with floorp, because it allowed native title bar disabling, with task bar editing so I could inject a grab handle; vertical tabs in sidebery, and a clean, nearly-ui-free vertical.

      • @ilinamorato
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        6 hours ago

        You can actually fairly easily unload tabs with about:unloads right now, but you have to do it in the order Facebook Firefox thinks they should be done for some reason.

        Honestly, I don’t know why, but sidebar tabs have just never worked for me. It makes no sense, but for some reason my brain just doesn’t process them correctly.

        But I agree, in general more fine-grained control of tabs would be the thing I would need in order to feel like Firefox was feature-complete.

        Edit: Facebook? Wtf?

  • 𝘋𝘪𝘳𝘬
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    722 days ago

    Also don’t add advertising crap that is opt-out and only configurable via about:config.

    • Possibly linux
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      42 days ago

      And stop forcing websites into darkmode. Part of the reason I use resist fingerprinting is for theming.

      • Dojan
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        31 day ago

        You could use LibreWolf.

  • Taylor
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    122 days ago

    @RmDebArc_5 @firefox I believe they really need better tab organization (without the need for extensions). just basic tab grouping like chrome is a very important feature.

  • @[email protected]
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    Agreed. This is the only reason (besides the built-in fake VPN) OperaGX is popular. All browsers have pretty much the same feature set. OperaGX’s biggest strength is CSS customization, Firefox’s biggest strength is extensions, Edge’s is being the Windows default and Chrome’s is it’s image of “fast and secure browsing”.

    All Firefox needs to be is a jack of all trades. But still prioritize it’s main distinction.

      • Possibly linux
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        11 day ago

        Well I’m very unlikely to stray from Foss. The problem with theming is that it allows websites to pick you out in a crowd. That won’t matter much if you don’t clear cookies on close but for people who want to resist fingerprinting that is a deal breaker.

        I would love to theme the browser but that also themes websites are far as I can tell.

  • @Lightsong
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    01 day ago

    Uhh also, auto captioning features like Google chrome pls.

      • @kitnaht
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        1 day ago

        When chromium is 99% of what people are using for browsing, it IS the web standard. That’s the whole point of telling people to get the fuck off of it. Are you not old enough to remember IE4 and ActiveX?

        • @[email protected]
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          318 hours ago

          I don’t test my stuff on Firefox as a Firefox user. Don’t have time for the weirdos. My users are on Chrome. It works if and only if it works on Chromium. That’s the reality.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 day ago

        For me it’s anything like excalidraw or something like Google sheets. They work fine until I change tabs and come back then it’s blank. But if I move the arrow keys or scroll wheel then every comes in and out of existence or stays on the screen even if I select another sheet until I close and reopen the site. But I never noticed this issue before moving to Linux so maybe it’s an issue on my machine

        • @[email protected]
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          51 day ago

          Idk for sure, but if excalidraw uses canvas then there are a lot more possible machine/OS specific problems that come up. Web browser features that hand tasks off to the GPU have gotten a lot better over recent years but there are still oddities like max shaders for a specific browser/OS/GPU combo that’ll lead to some funny behavior.

          • @[email protected]
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            119 hours ago

            ok so if its being passed on to the GPU then that actually makes me think its that. I bought this GPU used from a buddy and was having issue’s with my wife’s machine playing GTA5, I thought the GPU just couldnt handle it but maybe it has an issue