@zvava@twtxt.net Late happy birthday! :-)
Cool, your website indeed mostly works even in w3m and ELinks. Sending notifications in the about page is out of question, since it requires JS. Apart from that, this is very good, keep it up!
Not sure how I can get the deskop look and feel working in Firefox, but since Iâm a tiling window manager user, I prefer linear webpages anyway. :-)
@prologic@twtxt.net hmmm:
Firefox canât establish a connection to the server at wss://meet.mills.io/ws/Yarn.social/l3oVrknUnjZo2zSQoGlOX3.
Whatâs brokenâą on my system that makes a little âdoorâ show up in YouTubeâs progress thingy? Happens in Firefox and Chromium. https://movq.de/v/f03f47afcc
@zvava@twtxt.net Hm, I tried with https://www.uninformativ.de/twtxt.txt#:~:text=2025-09- and my Firefox 143 didnât like it. https://www.uninformativ.de/twtxt.txt#:~:text=2025%2D09%2D worked. đ€
@movq@www.uninformativ.de huh, firefox actually does seem to tolerate the dashes in the fragment. also, i did propose simply using an anchor link first, but prologic was not a fan of this :p
url metadata field unequivocally treated as the canon feed url when calculating hashes, or are they ignored if they're not at least proper urls? do you just tolerate it if they're impersonating someone else's feed, or pointing to something that isn't even a feed at all?
(#abcdefghijkl https://example.com/tw.txt#:~:text=2025-10-01T10:28:00Z), because it can be simply hacked in to clients currently on hashv1 and provides an off-ramp to location-based addressing
I like that property (an off-ramp to location-based addressing), so I think I could live with that approach. â
(Iâm not sure why weâre using text fragments, though. Wouldnât that link to the first occurence of 2025-10-01T10:28:00Z? Thatâs not necessarily correct. And, to be proper URLs that Firefox and Chromium understand, it would also need to be written as 2025%2D10%2D01T10:28:00Z. The dash carries meaning, sadly. I think all this just creates needless complication. How about we just go with https://example.com/tw.txt#2025-10-01T10:28:00Z?)
@itsericwoodward@itsericwoodward.com No worries, all good, mate! We all have to start somewhere. Other software requests my feed several orders of magnitude more often.
I can confirm, the User-Agent header appears to be fixed. \o/
Two other things I noticed, though:
Thereâs now an
OPTIONSrequest for my feed coming from something that claims to be Firefox, pointing to your feed URL in the query. No clue what this is about. In any case, itâs rejected with a405 Method Not Allowed.Not that these few requests bother me at all, but you might wanna implement caching next with either the
If-Modified-SinceorIf-None-Matchrequest headers. This way, if the feed hasnât changed, the web server can reply with a304 Not Modifiedand no body at all, saving unnecessary traffic. But again, this is really not an issue for me at all. I just wanted to make sure youâre aware of it, thatâs all. It might be even already on your agenda. Or you might decide to never do anything about it, which is also fine for me. :-)
While working on the Discoverability for my twtxt client (it runs client-side) I found out that Chrome doesnât allow to set a custom user agent. đ
I thought it was a general thing for browsers, but it that was actually allowed in a newer specification, yet itâs still not implemented in Chrome, it does work in Firefox though.
Hmm, not experiencing that. Using Zen (Firefox), under Linux, with uBlock Origin.
Right, now that Iâm reading some comments: I was initially assuming that they would actually make it impossible for distros to provide a 32-bit build (intentionally or unintentionally). But maybe thatâs not the case and distros can just continue to ship a 32-bit Firefox âŠ
Is that really necessary? How hard is it to make a 32-bit build? đ€ Honest question. https://blog.mozilla.org/futurereleases/2025/09/05/firefox-32-bit-linux-support-to-end-in-2026/
You can fuck right off, thank you very much.
(18/29) upgrading firefox
New optional dependencies for firefox
onnxruntime: Local machine learning features such as smart tab groups
I was drafting support for showing âapplication iconsâ in my window manager, i.e. the Firefox icon in the titlebar:
https://movq.de/v/0034cc1384/s.png
Then I realized: Wait a minute, lots of applications donât set an icon? And lots of other window managers donât show these icons, either? Openbox, pekwm, Xfce, fvwm, no icons.
Looks like macOS doesnât show them, either?!
Has this grown out of fashion? Is this purely a Windows / OS/2 thing?
@bender@twtxt.net An older Firefox on Debian.
@lyse@lyse.isobeef.org which browser do you use? Chrome, Edge, and Firefox, under Ubuntu, all show it fine.
about:compat in Firefox.
@movq@www.uninformativ.de Wow, I use Firefox and didnât realize this existed! Thanks for pointing it out. I noticed at least one bug cited a webcompat.com report; I wonder if someone at Mozilla monitors those. https://webcompat.com/issues?page=1&per_page=50&state=open&stage=all&sort=created&direction=desc
The brokenness of the web can be examined by opening about:compat in Firefox.

Lots and lots of workarounds for specific websites.
@movq@www.uninformativ.de Yeah, most of the graphical applications are actually KDE programs:
- KMail â e-mail client
- Okular â PDF viewer
- Gwenview â image viewer
- Dolphin â file browser
- KWallet â password manager (I want to check out
passone day. The most annoying thing is that when I copy a password, it says that the password has been modified and asks me whether I want to save the changes. I never do, because the password is still the same. I donât get it.)
- KPatience â card game
- Kdenlive â video editor
- Kleopatra â certificate manager
Qt:
- VLC â video player
- Psi â Jabber client (I happily used Kopete in the past, but that is not supported anymore or so. I donât remember.)
- sqlitebrowser â SQLite browser
Gtk:
- Firefox â web browser
- Quod Libet â music player (I should look for a better alternative. Canât remember why I had to move away from Amarok, was it dead? There was a fork Clementine or so, but I had to drop that for some unknown reason, too.)
- Audacity â audio editor
- GIMP â image editor
These are the things that are open right now or that I could think of. Most other stuff I actually do in the terminal.
In the pastâą, I used the Python KDE4 bindings. That was really nice. I could pass most stuff directly in the constructor and didnât have to call gazillions of setters improving the experience significantly. If I ever wanted to do GUI programming again, Iâd definitely go that route. There are also great Qt bindings for Python if one wanted to avoid the KDE stuff on top. The vast majority I do for myself, though, is either CLI or maybe TUI. A few web shit things, but no GUIs anymore. :-)
A look at Firefox forks
Mozillaâs actions have been rubbing many Firefox fans the wrong way as of late, and inspiring them to look for alternatives. There are many choices for users who are looking for a browser that isnât part of the Chrome monoculture but is full-featured and suitable for day-to-day use. For those who are willing to stay in the Firefox âfamilyâ there are a number of good options that have taken vastly different approaches. This includes GNU IceCat, Floorp, LibreWolf, and Zen. â« Joe Brockm ⊠â Read more
Mozilla deletes promise not to sell Firefox usersâ data
The hits just keep on coming. Mozilla not only changed its Privacy Notice and introduced a Terms of Use for Firefox for the first time with some pretty onerous terms, they also removed a rather specific question and answer pair from their page with frequently asked questions about Firefox, as discovered by David Gerard. The following question and answer were removed: Does Firefox sell your personal data? Nope. Never have, ⊠â Read more
Mozilla is going to collect a lot more data from Firefox users
I guess my praise for Mozillaâs and Firefoxâ continued support for Manifest v2 had to be balanced out by Mozilla doing something stupid. Mozilla just published Terms of Use for Firefox for the first time, as well as an updated Privacy Notice, that come into effect immediately and include some questionable terms. The Terms of Use state: When you upload or input information through Firefox, you hereby grant u ⊠â Read more
Mozilla reaffirms it wonât remove Manifest v2 support from Firefox
Mozilla has officially reiterated that itâs going to keep offering support for both Manifest v2 and Manifest v3 extensions in Firefox. Google is removing support for Manifest v2 from Chrome, and with it a feature called blockingWebRequest that is used by ad blockers like uBlock Origin. Googleâs replacement for that feature is more restrictive and less capable, and as such, uBlock Origin no longer wor ⊠â Read more
Mozilla once again confirms itâs all about ads and âAIâ now
Weâve recognized that Mozilla faces major headwinds in terms of both financial growth and mission impact. While Firefox remains the core of what we do, we also need to take steps to diversify: investing in privacy-respecting advertising to grow new revenue in the near term; developing trustworthy, open source AI to ensure technical and product relevance in the mid term; and creating online fundraising campaigns that ⊠â Read more
Run Linux inside a PDF file via a RISC-V emulator
You might expect PDF files to only be comprised of static documents, but surprisingly, the PDF file format supports Javascript with its own separate standard library. Modern browsers (Chromium, Firefox) implement this as part of their PDF engines. However, the APIs that are available in the browser are much more limited. The full specfication for the JS in PDFs was only ever implemented by Adobe Acrobat, and it contains some ridicul ⊠â Read more
I tried using Firefox Focus as my default browser for a while but it was to extreme. Itâs still the only one on my home screen. 50-60 is sort of my intent, but then it keeps being âjust one moreâŠâ.
posting from my phone yayyy just downloaded a random tabbed browser off f-droid for this bc my main mobile browser is firefox focus which isnât great for persisting data
@movq@www.uninformativ.de Where in firefox can I set custom CSS?
I was today years old when I learned that Firefox supports custom per-domain CSS. Is this new? I thought I had tried a while ago and it only worked globally. đ€
@-moz-document domain(movq.de)
{
div { border: 1px solid red; }
}
Either way, I love that I donât need a plugin for that. đ„ł
Always has been. Web spec is too hard to implement your own web browser from scratch (nothing can, even Google and Apple, they forked KHTML). So if we not count forks we have only three browsers: Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox and Apple Safari
@falsifian@www.falsifian.org Thanks mate! It just occurred to me the other night that my alt choices are not the best. I should probably fix them.
This also reminds me of a JS snippet my mate wrote for navigation in browsers that donât support incrementing numbers in the URLs. Iâm using Tridactyl in Firefox and can Ctrl+A/Ctrl+X myself through albums with properly named files.
After many many years on Firefox, I am making the move to Vivaldi.
@aelaraji@aelaraji.com Hmm that is worth trying. It is the same base Firefox I guess đ€
@eldersnake@we.loveprivacy.club Wouldnât it be possible to use it with your older FF profile? smt like this ?
@aelaraji@aelaraji.com Yep seems alright! Really fast too. Iâm still using my main Firefox in general cos.. well itâs set up so much and itâs hardened, profile running in RAM, all that crazy stuff that got it working the way I want đ
But keeping a good eye on Zen Browserâs progress.
This Zen-Browser is actually not bad! đ€Ż
- Based on Firefox instead of Chromium.
- Got tiling pans when you need them⊠(just like a tiling window manager).
- I can hide the Tabs and Nav-Bar with a single short-cut!! AKA Compact Mode âŠ
Interesting.. QUIC isnât very quick over fast internet.
QUIC is expected to be a game-changer in improving web application performance. In this paper, we conduct a systematic examination of QUICâs performance over high-speed networks. We find that over fast Internet, the UDP+QUIC+HTTP/3 stack suffers a data rate reduction of up to 45.2% compared to the TCP+TLS+HTTP/2 counterpart. Moreover, the performance gap between QUIC and HTTP/2 grows as the underlying bandwidth increases. We observe this issue on lightweight data transfer clients and major web browsers (Chrome, Edge, Firefox, Opera), on different hosts (desktop, mobile), and over diverse networks (wired broadband, cellular). It affects not only file transfers, but also various applications such as video streaming (up to 9.8% video bitrate reduction) and web browsing. Through rigorous packet trace analysis and kernel- and user-space profiling, we identify the root cause to be high receiver-side processing overhead, in particular, excessive data packets and QUICâs user-space ACKs. We make concrete recommendations for mitigating the observed performance issues.
Referer is /post then consider that total bullshit, and ignore? đ€
@prologic@twtxt.net Firefox 126.0.1 is my primary
/post) on either the POST or the GET đ€
@prologic@twtxt.net Firefox but it happens on Brave and Chromium on my laptop, or any browser (Brave, Chromium, Vanadium) I try on my Android phone.
Mais elle est trop pratique cette extension pour avoir une table des matiÚres automatiquement générée: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/smart_toc/ #firefox
What? You are still using chrome? Firefox is where its at. But if you need WebKit there is always chromium which strips out all the google nonsense.
Borré todo el historial del navegador (Edge) y activé el Modo oscuro. Se siente mucho mås limpio, y prefiero que todo esté oscuro. En general funciona muy bien, aunque en Google Drive siguen problemas (Por ello lo desactivé meses atrås). Me parece que usaré Drive en Firefox, y ahà esconderé el modo oscuro.
Probando Webauth đ con mĂĄs de un dispositivo desde Firefox/Win 10
Uninstalled Brave browser and went back to only using Firefox.
Added to the fun. 
@jlj@twt.nfld.uk oh dang the reply didnt add the reply. It was to @hxii@0xff.nu because Firefox shows his shruggy like ĂÂŻ\_(ĂŁÆâ)_/ĂÂŻ