Posts Tagged ‘browser’
Wednesday, November 29th, 2006
I’ve decided to try and give up using Firefox for at least one week. In it’s place I plan on using Konqueror and in some cases where I’m using OSX, Safari or perhaps Camino. The real test for me though is to see if I can make Konqueror do everything I’m used to doing (and worry that I can’t live without) with Firefox.
I’ve been falling slowly out of infatuation with Firefox for a while now. Version 2.0 left me mildly underwhelmed and dealing with much of the same-old including an annoying memory leak. Since I use KDE as my desktop environment, I’ve always had Konqueror kicking around and have been very impressed with it’s abilities as a file manager. In my job, where I often have to migrate many files from server A to B, Konqueror’s view splitting features kick serious ass. As a web browser that I’ve had access to for almost two years, I’ve probably used it a handful of times, mainly because of my dependence on Firefox extensions.
This reliance on extensions bothers me. The fact that enough people use it now that exploits are starting to show up isn’t great news to me either. Granted, they’re generally addressed pretty fast, but whatever. Really cool people use fringe, obscure browsers like Konqueror or Lynx.
(more…)
Tags: browser, extensions, Firefox, kde, konqueror, kubuntu, Linux, Ubuntu, web
Posted in Geeky, Linux, Ubuntu | No Comments »
Monday, September 18th, 2006
I’m writing this post using Lynx, a command-line, text-only browser, just to see how it works out. I feel cool, thrilled, even daring. Lynx is pretty neat shit, however extremely limited. It manages to handle text, links and frames but can’t handle such things as CSS styling, images and all that newfangled fancy shit.
I first installed it as a fall-back if I should ever have a problem with my X server not starting, which is possible since I like to beta and even alpha test shit. This way, even though I didn’t have a GUI desktop environment to launch my usual browser of choice, I could still boot to just a command-line and hit the support forums for assistance using Lynx.
After a bit of tooling around in the options, I configured Vim to run as my default text editor within Lynx, so in an instance where I would need to enter text (like for this blog post), I can launch Vim and start typing away. Vim is a command-line text editor that I’m sorta-kinda-almost comfortable with. It’s one of those editors that at first glance looks ridiculously difficult to handle, but the more you use, the easier it becomes and if you have the balls, you learn the myriad assortment of commands and eventually become the ultimate text wrangling master. You also never get laid again, ever. A geek milestone that I’m not ashamed to aspire to.
Now that I’ve proved to myself that I can effectively post to my blog with a command-line browser, the likelihood that I’ll do so again is pretty much nil. Yeah, it’s cool, old-school shit, but I do prefer the glittery trappings of the WordPress GUI. Still, I think Lynx is a must-have install for situations like I mentioned above when all hell breaks loose and your GUI has shit the bed and died. It’s also a great barometer of how well put together your website is. Fire up Lynx and check out what your site looks like. Like I said before, CSS styling and graphics will not be displayed, but if you’ve laid things out properly, you’ll see a sane and coherent text-only version of your website. If shit’s all jumbled with stuff that’s supposed to be at the bottom running at the top, then perhaps some redesigning is in order.
Tags: browser, command-line, internet, kubuntu, Linux, lynx, text, Ubuntu, vim, web
Posted in Geeky, Linux, Ubuntu | 5 Comments »
Wednesday, July 19th, 2006
Willing to risk browser stability at work, I’ve installed Firefox 2.0 Beta, just for giggles. It seems to be working smoothly. The huge downer is of the twelve extensions (now called Add-ons) that I use daily, only three made the transition while the rest are in limbo till updated versions are released. No big deal, this is a beta product anyway and I should have all of them back by the final release as they are all popular extensions.
As I type this post, I realize that I’m immediately sold on Firefox 2.0’s built-in spell-check. It fucking rules! All misspelled or questioned words are automatically underlined in red as I type. I have waited so fucking long and meddled with so many damn alternative extensions to manage my inability to type like a competent person. It’s great.
RSS feeds are better supported with most of the features of the LiveLines extension being integrated. When I click the feed icon on a website, I’m prompted to choose how I want to handle feeds such as staying with the old Live Bookmarks, which i never liked or adding to Bloglines, which I’m currently using as well as some support for other readers. It’s a small improvement—really I’d rather have the answer to all my RSS gripes, but at least I have spell-checking.
I also notice that accidentally closed tabs can now be recovered, and crashed sessions can now be restored. All good things, I guess. Anti-phishing measures have been built in and the close button for tabs are now placed individually for each tab—something I was handling with an extension previously. However, to be picky, I dislike the left-side placement for the close button on each tab. I’d prefer it on the right. As far as bloat goes, on OSX, it seems to be running pretty damn fast.
I’m not going to bother trying it on Linux until the final version comes out. All in all I’m happy, but perhaps a little underwhelmed. I guess with the big jump to 2.0, I was hoping for everything to be turned upside down, which is definitely not the case. It’s nicer, but still the same browser.
Whatever, I have spell-check now!
****Addendum****
The Nightly Tester Tools extension forces Firefox extensions to work with whatever version your currently testing/abusing. With this installed, I now have all my usual extensions running as normal. It’s great.
Tags: beta, browser, Firefox, firefox2, software
Posted in Coolness, Geeky, Reviews | 1 Comment »
Wednesday, July 12th, 2006
This morning I felt like I wanted to try something new, so I installed Flock, the plugged-in, oh-so-social spin-off of the Firefox browser. Flock is basically the same as Firefox, but with integrated support for Flickr, Photobucket, del.icio.us, Shadows and most popular blogging software. Lotsa whiz-bang fancy shit going on.
After installing, I went through the setup and hooked Flock into my Flickr and del.icio.us accounts as well as this blog (typing that word makes me feel dirty… go figure). Currently, I’m typing this post using Flock’s built-in editor. I write the post, click publish and the post should go live, I guess, we’ll see.
(more…)
Tags: browser, Firefox, Flickr, flock, kubuntu, Linux, mac, open-source, photobucket, Reviews, rss, sage, shadows, software, Ubuntu, web
Posted in Geeky, Linux, Reviews | No Comments »
Friday, May 26th, 2006
I was checking out an article about various keyboard shortcuts with KDE and I was blown away by a feature in Konqueror. When viewing a web page in Konqueror, holding down CTRL highlights every link on the page with a letter or number that you type in and hit enter to navigate without having to use a mouse. I don’t know how long I’ve wished for something like this. I hate having to use a mouse and especially with a laptop, it’s a really big bitch.
Unfortunately, I’m addicted to the various extensions that I depend on with Firefox and I just can’t switch over to Konqueror. So, I immediately started scouring through available Firefox extensions on mozilla.org and after a good long while (Mozilla’s extension organization sucks), I finally found the equivalent. NumberFox does the exact same thing. Using only numbers to tag links, the font is a little too small and there’s no options to change anything, but it does the job. On a web page, hitting ALT-w activates NumberFox for both Windows and Linux (APPLE-e on Mac) and you’re off, leaving that mouse in the dust. I find that some links and some pages do not respond to the extension&8212;links in Flash are obviously a no-go, but I find that it works in 95% of the pages I’ve tried so far.
Tags: browser, browsing, extensions, Firefox, kde, konqueror, kubuntu, links, Linux, Mozilla, navigation, Ubuntu
Posted in Coolness, Geeky, Linux, Reviews | No Comments »
Friday, May 12th, 2006
While I’ve known that Gmail uses SSL to log in, someone recently pointed out to me that while my password is sent to Google fully encrypted, once logged in, all pages that I view are sent via http, meaning that all the emails I read and send can be scooped right out of the ether at any open hotspot.
One remedy I found is to manually change the address from
http://mail.google.com/mail/ to https://mail.google.com/mail/
and for that session, you should be using https and all the pages you view in Gmail will be encrypted. Very cool, but I have to remember to manually check this every time I log in. I smoked way too much weed as a teenager. Half the time I don’t even know what day of the week it is. No lie. How am I supposed to consistently remember this?
Looking further, I found this great extension for Firefox that takes care of the problem for me. CustomizeGoogle lets you set a whole mess of options for a variety of Google services. I won’t get into most of the details since they don’t apply, but check them out because a lot of them are pretty cool. One option that is relevant is that once installed, you can set an option for Gmail to always use https by default. Just check off that one option and from that point on, you have worry-free, encrypted Gmail sessions as a default. Pretty damn useful. CustomizeGoogle also lets you set an https default option for Google Calendar as well. Even sweeter.
Unfortunately, Safari, Konqueror and other browser users are out of luck (IE users, you deserve what you get.) with this extension, so unless there’s something else out there, they have to manually check the session every time or set a bookmark using https in the URL and be consistent about accessing Gmail through that bookmark.
Tags: browser, email, encryption, extension, Firefox, Gmail, google, http, https, internet, mail, privacy, secure, Security, sessions, ssl, web
Posted in Coolness, Geeky, Ranting, Tutorials | No Comments »
Wednesday, December 28th, 2005
Every once and a while, I come across a website where some bumblefuck idiot tries to stop visitors from right-clicking on their page, usually in a sad little attempt to prevent people from downloading their images. They copy and paste the little Javascript trick to disable right-clicking and sleep peacefully, under the impression that their dearest little JPEGS are safe and secure.
Anyone with half a brain cell should know that if you’re going to insist on controlling your content and being a greedy little fuck, putting your crap on a website is not the way to go. By viewing a web page , your computer is requesting and downloading the files that create the page to it’s hard drive and then displaying them in your browser. If you put an image in a web page, anyone who views it has already downloaded it. Disabling the right-click is not only pointless and retarded, it’s really fucking annoying and a bit insulting. Who the fuck tells you what you can or cannot right-click on? Screw that!
If someone’s decided to go all control freaky and disable right-clicking, they should know that it takes me all of a few seconds to open my browser cache to get at it. Easy shit.
So fuck this anti-right-clicking shit. It pisses me off. I rarely make a habit of using images from other websites and if I do, it’s a site that has an explicit Creative Commons license encouraging me to do so. So why be such a hater? Loosen that sphincter! Your shitty Photoshop Elements pixel vomit is hardly worth stealing anyway.
It’s possible that at this point, dearest reader, that you may be picking up on the fact that this stupid little practice seriously irritates me. Okay, okay, I admit it. It makes me want stab things and fling poop like an irate Rhesus monkey. So is daveb the type of punk-ass bitch to take this no right-clicking shit by bending over, grabbing his ankles and reciting the Lord’s Prayer? Fuck no, people of the world! You can disable that shit permanently and he’s going to show you how. This wild man we call daveb rules!
First off, this tutorial assumes you are using Firefox 1.5. If you’re not using it, you should be, so switch. Do it. Do it now. It’s the dog’s fucking balls, daveb swears. Got it? Cool.
Disabling right-click blocking with Firefox
- Open Firefox (duh)
- Get all up in your options/preferences. It varies by OS. For Linux, it’s Edit>Preferences. OSX is Firefox>Preferences. Windows hides it in Tools>options.
- From there, get your ass into the section named “Content” and find the little checkbox named “enable Javascript” and click the “Advanced” button that’s next to it. This will pop up a new little options window.
- In this window, you will see a checkbox named “Disable or replace context menus“. Uncheck that shit!
That’s it!
Tags: browser, browsing, Firefox, howto, image, Javascript, right-click, tutorial
Posted in Geeky, Tutorials | 2 Comments »
Tuesday, August 2nd, 2005
If you’re a Firefox junky like me, you probably take the built in pop-up blocker for granted. It’s a dandy little feature that helps make browsing bearable. However, you may have noticed that over the past few months, the blocker seems to be letting stuff through. This is due to scumbag pop-up spammers taking a new tactic by using Flash to trigger the new windows. The honeymoon is looking to be at an end.
But, before you hang yourself from the shower curtain rod, there’s a way around this issue. Pour a stiff drink, sit down, tear up the suicide notes (you really aren’t sorry for all the trouble you’ve caused anyway, c’mon) and prepare to do some fixing!
How to stop pop-ups from Flash in Firefox
- Open a window in Firefox (…duh) and type about:config in the address bar.
- Right-click (CTRL + click for Mac users) on the page and select New and then Integer.
- Name it privacy.popups.disable_from_plugins
- Set the value to 2.
That’s it motherfucker! You’re a man now. Have a cigar or something. Buck the fuck up, you did it yourself. Stop slouching. It’s okay to smile, but ain’t a damn thing funny…yadda, yadda, yadda.
To take it further, you can adjust the value of the integer (we’d set it at 2) to customize how strong the pop-up spanking should be:
- 0: Allow all popups from plugins.
- 1: Allow popups, but limit them to dom.popup_maximum.
- 2: Block popups from plugins.
- 3: Block popups from plugins, even on whitelisted sites.
Just thought I’d spread the word. Thanks Pete Bevin for figuring it out and thanks StumbleUpon for bringing it to my attention.
Tags: annoyances, browser, Firefox, fixes, hacking, hacks, pop-ups, spam, spammers, tweaking, tweaks, web
Posted in Geeky, Tutorials | No Comments »