15
submitted 9 months ago by IngrownMink4@lemmy.ml to c/rust@lemmy.ml

publicado de forma cruzada desde: https://infosec.pub/post/8054415

Stract is an open source search engine where the user has the ability to see exactly what is going on and customize almost everything about their search results. It's a search engine made for hackers and tinkerers just like ourselves. No more searches where some of the terms in the query arent used, and the engine tries to guess what you really meant. You get what you search for.

Fun fact: It's written in Rust! (nearly 90%) https://github.com/StractOrg/stract

[-] IngrownMink4@lemmy.ml 19 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Firefox, Blender, OBS, FreeType…

[-] IngrownMink4@lemmy.ml 8 points 1 year ago

Good news for the Fediverse btw.

1
submitted 2 years ago by IngrownMink4@lemmy.ml to c/firefox@lemmy.ml

Version 113.0, first offered to Release channel users on May 9, 2023

New

  • Say hello to enhanced Picture-in-Picture! Rewind, check video duration, and effortlessly switch to full-screen mode on the web's most popular video websites.
  • Firefox's address bar is already a great place to search for what you're looking for. Now you'll always be able to see your web search terms and refine them while viewing your search's results - no additional scrolling needed! Also, a new result menu has been added making it easier to remove history results and dismiss sponsored Firefox Suggest entries.
  • Private windows now protect users even better by blocking third-party cookies and storage of content trackers.
  • Passwords automatically generated by Firefox now include special characters, giving users more secure passwords by default.
  • Firefox 113 introduces a redesigned accessibility engine which significantly improves the speed, responsiveness, and stability of Firefox when used with: Screen readers, as well as certain other accessibility software, East Asian input methods, Enterprise single sign-on software, and Other applications which use accessibility frameworks to access information.
  • Importing bookmarks from Safari or a Chrome-based browser? The favicons for those bookmarks will now also be imported by default to make them easier to identify.
  • Firefox 113 now supports AV1 Image Format files containing animations (AVIS), improving support for AVIF images across the web.
  • The Windows GPU sandbox first shipped in the Firefox 110 release has been tightened to enhance the security benefits it provides.
  • A 13-year-old feature request was fulfilled and Firefox now supports files being drag-and-dropped directly from Microsoft Outlook. A special thanks to volunteer contributor Marco Spiess for helping to get this across the finish line!
  • Users on macOS can now access the Services sub-menu directly from Firefox context menus.
  • On Windows, the elastic overscroll effect has been enabled by default. When two-finger scrolling on the touchpad or scrolling on the touchscreen, you will now see a bouncing animation when scrolling past the edge of a scroll container.
  • Firefox is now available in the Tajik (tg) language.

Fixed

Various security fixes.

Changed

  • The long-deprecated mozRTCPeerConnection, mozRTCIceCandidate, and mozRTCSessionDescription WebRTC interfaces have been removed. Sites should utilize the non-prefixed versions instead.

Enterprise

Developer

Developer Information

There have been numerous improvements to the Debugger's "Search in files" feature (also known as "Project search"):

  • The panel has been moved to a regular side panel, which allows you to keep the results list visible while opening scripts in the editor;
  • Results from minified and pretty-printed tabs, as well as matches from the node_modules folder, are displayed;
  • Results from ignored files are hidden; and
  • Glob patterns and search modifiers are also supported, making it possible to execute case-sensitive or regex searches on specific parts of your project. Additional features include support for pretty printing inline scripts in HTML files and column breakpoints in pretty printed sources.

It is now possible to override a JavaScript file in the debugger. In the Debugger, under the Sources tree, you can use the "Add script override" context menu entry. This action will download the file onto your machine, allowing you to edit it. After reloading the page, the local file will be loaded instead of the original script (indicated by a purple icon when a file is overridden).

Web Platform

  • Module scripts can now import other ES module scripts on worklets.
  • Firefox 113 includes new CSS functionality, including improved support for the color (level 4) specification (such as the lab(), lch(), oklab(), oklch(), and color() functions) and the scripting media query.
  • Firefox 113 adds support for a number of WebRTC features for improved interoperability: RTCMediaSourceStats, RTCPeerConnectionState, RTCPeerConnectionStats ("peer-connection" RTCStatsType), RTCRtpSender.setStreams(), and RTCSctpTransport.
  • The forced-color-adjust property is now supported, allowing authors to opt an element out of color changes in Forced Color Mode for improved readability where the automatically-picked contrasting colors are not ideal.
1
submitted 2 years ago by IngrownMink4@lemmy.ml to c/firefox@lemmy.ml

Firefox users should now get a much smoother and better-performing experience while browsing the web.

[-] IngrownMink4@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 years ago
[-] IngrownMink4@lemmy.ml 0 points 2 years ago

At least you have Alovoa!

[-] IngrownMink4@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 years ago

I know. A wise decision imo.

12
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by IngrownMink4@lemmy.ml to c/firefox@lemmy.ml
8
submitted 2 years ago by IngrownMink4@lemmy.ml to c/firefox@lemmy.ml
[-] IngrownMink4@lemmy.ml 12 points 2 years ago

Based admin confirmed?

10
submitted 2 years ago by IngrownMink4@lemmy.ml to c/firefox@lemmy.ml

Mozilla Firefox 102 was released today with a new privacy feature that strips parameters from URLs that are used to track you around the web.

Numerous companies, including Facebook, Marketo, Olytics, and HubSpot, utilize custom URL query parameters to track clicks on links.

With the release of Firefox 102, Mozilla has added the new 'Query Parameter Stripping' feature that automatically strips various query parameters used for tracking from URLs when you open them, whether that be by clicking on a link or simply pasting the URL into the address bar.

21
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by IngrownMink4@lemmy.ml to c/firefox@lemmy.ml

Version 100.0, first offered to Release channel users on May 3, 2022

Thank you to everyone who got us here: To every employee past and present who played a role in delivering Firefox—thank you for your grit and hard work. To every contributor who championed open source, thank you for turning a browser into a movement!

Finally, thanks to every user of Firefox—thank you most of all. We didn’t get here—17 years and 100 versions later—without your support. Your choice to use Firefox contributes directly to a better web, keeping it open and accessible to all. It is with a profound sense of gratitude and appreciation that we will continue fighting for this global public resource, putting people over profits.

New

  • We now support captions/subtitles display on YouTube, Prime Video, and Netflix videos you watch in Picture-in-Picture. Just turn on the subtitles on the in-page video player, and they will appear in PiP.
  • Picture-in-Picture now also supports video captions on websites that use WebVTT (Web Video Text Track) format, like Coursera.org, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, and many more.
  • On the first run after install, Firefox detects when its language does not match the operating system language and offers the user a choice between the two languages.
  • Firefox spell checking now checks spelling in multiple languages. To enable additional languages, select them in the text field’s context menu.
  • HDR video is now supported in Firefox on Mac—starting with YouTube! Firefox users on macOS 11+ (with HDR-compatible screens) can enjoy higher-fidelity video content. No need to manually flip any preferences to turn HDR video support on—just make sure battery preferences are NOT set to “optimize video streaming while on battery”.
  • Hardware accelerated AV1 video decoding is enabled on Windows with supported GPUs (Intel Gen 11+, AMD RDNA 2 Excluding Navi 24, GeForce 30). Installing the AV1 Video Extension from the Microsoft Store may also be required.
  • Video overlay is enabled on Windows for Intel GPUs, reducing power usage during video playback.
  • Improved fairness between painting and handling other events. This noticeably improves the performance of the volume slider on Twitch.
  • Scrollbars on Linux and Windows 11 won't take space by default. On Linux, users can change this in Settings. On Windows, Firefox follows the system setting (System Settings > Accessibility > Visual Effects > Always show scrollbars).
  • Firefox now supports credit card autofill and capture in the United Kingdom.
  • Firefox now ignores less restricted referrer policies—including unsafe-url, no-referrer-when-downgrade, and origin-when-cross-origin—for cross-site subresource/iframe requests to prevent privacy leaks from the referrer.

Fixed

  • Users can now choose preferred color schemes for websites. Theme authors can now make better decisions about which color scheme Firefox uses for menus. Web content appearance can now be changed in Settings.
  • Beginning in this release, the Firefox installer for Windows is signed with a SHA-256 digest, rather than SHA-1. Update KB4474419 is required for successful installation on a computer running Microsoft Windows 7. For more details about this update, visit the Microsoft Technical Support website.
  • In macOS 11+ we now only rasterize the fonts once per window. This means that opening a new tab is fast, and switching tabs in the same window is also fast. (There's still work to do to share fonts across windows, or to reduce the time it takes to initialize these fonts.)
  • The performance of deeply-nested display: grid elements is greatly improved.
  • Support for profiling multiple java threads has been added.
  • Soft-reloading a web page will no longer cause revalidation for all resources.
  • Non-vsync tasks are given more time to run, which improves behavior on Google docs and Twitch.
  • Geckoview APIs have been added to control the start/stop time of capturing a profile.
  • Various security fixes.

Changed

  • Firefox has a new focus indicator for links which replaces the old dotted outline with a solid blue outline. This change unifies the focus indicators across form fields and links, which makes it easier to identify the focused link, especially for users with low vision.
  • New users can now set Firefox as the default PDF handler when setting Firefox as their default browser.
  • Some websites might not work correctly in Firefox version 100 due to Firefox's new three-digit number. You can read about it in our blog post here!

See the Mozilla Support article Difficulties opening or using a website in Firefox 100 for possible workarounds you can use. There, you will also find instructions for reporting a broken website so that Mozilla can help fix the problem.

Mozilla Support articles for Desktop and Android:

https://support.mozilla.org/kb/difficulties-opening-or-using-website-firefox-100

https://support.mozilla.org/kb/difficulties-firefox-android-100

Enterprise

Various bug fixes and new policies have been implemented in the latest version of Firefox. You can find more information in the Firefox for Enterprise 100 Release Notes.

Developer

Developer Information

Web Platform

  • Support for the WritableStream API has landed. WritableStreams provide an interface for writing streaming data to a sink object.
  • Additionally, ReadableStream gained support for the “pipeTo” method, which allows you to connect a ReadableStream to a WritableStream. For example, this would allow you to process data retrieved using “fetch” with the WritableStream Sink object.
  • Support for WASM Exceptions is now available. This allows C++ exception handling and unwinding/destructing semantics to be expressed in WASM without an additional JavaScript helper code—and at zero cost to code that does not rely on exception semantics.
1
submitted 3 years ago by IngrownMink4@lemmy.ml to c/windows@lemmy.ml

publicado de forma cruzada desde: https://lemmy.ml/post/85946

The senior vice president of Microsoft Teams announced that Teams would be moving to their own Edge Webview2 Rendering Engine ditching Electron for seeking performance gains. It is marketed that Teams would consume 2x less memory as a result of the transition. It would be called Teams 2.0 and might ship with Windows 11 in late 2022.

17
submitted 3 years ago by IngrownMink4@lemmy.ml to c/rust@lemmy.ml

A simple note taking application written in Rust and GTK4.

Rnote aims to be a simple but functional note taking application for freehand drawing or annotating pictures or documents. It eventually should be able to import / export various media file formats. One main consideration is that it is vector based, which should make it very flexible in editing and altering the contents.

[-] IngrownMink4@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 years ago* (last edited 3 years ago)
  • Closed source (honestly, I'd rather not know what the redesign of Reddit is made of...)
  • It's annoying, slow and tedious
  • Works better in Chrome™ (I can't even scroll down the website properly with Firefox)
  • Harmful business model (Reddit Premium, Reddit Coins, pay-to-win-karma...)
  • It's a JavaScript powered website (not recommended for low-end machines)
  • Communities are full of racists, homophobes, sexists, xenophobes...
  • The use of sensationalist headlines is promoted to gain karma
  • Is the ideal site for alt-right and conspiracy theories apologists
  • Leftist/Communist/ML/MLM userbase is discriminated and censored everyday
  • Reddit moderators are terrible (most of them)
  • Dark patterns everywhere
  • They block Tor users
  • (I can think of many more but need I go on?)
1
submitted 3 years ago* (last edited 3 years ago) by IngrownMink4@lemmy.ml to c/opensource@lemmy.ml

publicado de forma cruzada desde: https://lemmy.ml/post/78544

It's probably well known at this point, but it doesn't hurt to spread the word further. Disabling accessibility services in Firefox (both on desktop and mobile, but specially on mobile) helps A LOT with performance and RAM usage.

Just set accessibility.force_disabled to 1 in about:config and enjoy the up to 20% less RAM usage and 5% less CPU usage (at least in my not so detailed testing on my laptop).

In my case my system went from 7.9GB to 5.2GB with the same tabs and windows open and from 25% to 20% CPU usage while having one of those tabs playing a livestream.

Quoting one of the comments in the Reddit thread I found this out to why this isn't disabled by default:

Accessibility does not start by default, but it starts lazily if another piece of software on your device starts requesting accessibility features from Firefox.

Unfortunately a lot of third-party software likes to do this even though they have nothing to do with assistive technologies.

You can also vote on this bug in Bugzilla to help it get solved faster.

1

publicado de forma cruzada desde: https://lemmy.ml/post/68205

Here is the source for the font: https://dtinth.github.io/comic-mono-font/

1

Paysage is a humanist-style sans-serif typeface created by Anton Moglia. It's characterised by a distinctive "g" and a regular rhythm. Paysage has been designed to give a feeling of simplicity and tranquility to the reader. Its design is adapted to the composition of short or long texts, legends or annotations.

[-] IngrownMink4@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 years ago

We also noticed a consistent criticism of the built-in slur filter in Lemmy.

  • The funniest and most ironic thing about this is that the same people who criticize the filter are the first to insult you... These people already have a home. That home is called Reddit. And even if they're more fascist, they'd better use Gab. But no, this social network better not be corrupted. Lemmy is a very healthy social network. People are friendly, curious and intelligent. It sounds a bit cliché, but it's the truth. I like to make comments and posts here. I feel more free to express myself, unlike in Reddit. I just hope the core developers continue to moderate as well as ever, without giving in to pressure from those troublesome users. Keep it up 💪🏽💖
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IngrownMink4

joined 4 years ago