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Ihmemies posted:22 released. Is there some way to disable: Set layout.css.devPixelsPerPx to 1.0 instead of -1.0 in about :config. Or better, check if you didn't set page zoom different from the default. The fix makes pages display in what should normally be the right size. If you fiddled with this before, because old versions didn't do it right, it'll now blow out in the opposite direction.
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# ? Jun 28, 2013 14:40 |
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# ? May 16, 2024 19:03 |
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Alereon posted:I think votes are ineffective for changing developers' minds, which is what Slashdot tries to use it for. Voting for bugs may still have value when you're hoping that particular bugs will be fixed sooner than others. Well, hardly. As pointed out the problem is that votes are easy to manipulate, and tend to be stale, i.e. people may have votes on bugs that are long fixed. That said, this bug sounds like it hits a big part of the userbase, and the reporter is a developer, so the odds that it will get fixed are quite good.
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# ? Jun 28, 2013 14:57 |
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Aleph Null posted:I was wrong. Aurora still locks up on my Xoom tablet. Did you get this fixed? Does it crash or just lock up? If it crashes, you can go to about :crashes, click, and see if it's known with a bug filed. If not and you can reproduce it on any page that's not personal (i.e. not your Facebook profile), please file a bug. Hiowf fucked around with this message at 15:17 on Jun 28, 2013 |
# ? Jun 28, 2013 15:13 |
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drat you, FF 23 I know about mixed content, you should, at the very least, offer me a white-list option
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# ? Jun 28, 2013 16:47 |
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Anyone know how I can tell FF to reload a thread at the exact position I'm currently looking at? It keeps jumping back to the post that was previously the last one.
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# ? Jun 28, 2013 19:34 |
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midnightclimax posted:Anyone know how I can tell FF to reload a thread at the exact position I'm currently looking at? It keeps jumping back to the post that was previously the last one. That's the forums' fault, since it's explicitly telling Firefox to scroll to a particular anchor. If you're just navigating by page instead of going to the last unread post (i.e. the URL has no fragment id - the thing with the #), then you'll get what you want.
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# ? Jun 28, 2013 20:02 |
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Click the little # symbol at the bottom of the post.
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# ? Jun 28, 2013 20:03 |
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Skuto posted:Did you get this fixed? Does it crash or just lock up? If it crashes, you can go to about :crashes, click, and see if it's known with a bug filed. Still not fixed. It normally just hangs indefinitely. When it does actually crash, I have it send in the debug info. This is most common on Facebook so I will try to find another page that is consistent.
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# ? Jun 28, 2013 20:55 |
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Where the gently caress did my bookmarks button go? EDIT: they removed the bookmarks button, and merged it with a button I didn't have on my setup, so when it updated POOF it was gone. AlmightyBob fucked around with this message at 21:08 on Jun 28, 2013 |
# ? Jun 28, 2013 20:56 |
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Avenging Dentist posted:That's the forums' fault, since it's explicitly telling Firefox to scroll to a particular anchor. If you're just navigating by page instead of going to the last unread post (i.e. the URL has no fragment id - the thing with the #), then you'll get what you want. Hmm, I might be wrong but I think Chrome ignores this. The Dark One posted:Click the little # symbol at the bottom of the post. Ah yeah that works. Thanks!
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# ? Jun 28, 2013 21:19 |
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Who the gently caress designed the sync feature? I reinstalled my Windows and browsers. On Opera, I have to delete all the preinstalled bookmarks and speed dial entries (so that they will not be synced on other devices, which is frankly bullshit), but after that I just use my username and password and it will download my bookmarks and speed dials and passwords and whatever. In Chrome, the same thing. Sign in using my username and password, get bookmarks (and extensions and some other stuff) On Firefox my options are to input some giant string into some other device, or (since i have no "other device") to sign in using my username and password. Except if i don't also know some mysterious string (and I don't), it will delete all my data. I guess I'm plugging my old failing hard drive back and getting my bookmarks and settings back that way, like a god drat savage.
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# ? Jun 29, 2013 00:29 |
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AlmightyBob posted:Where the gently caress did my bookmarks button go? what's the button they merged it with? I'm hesitant about updating from 21
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# ? Jun 29, 2013 01:57 |
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I haven't used a bookmarks button in ages, but in version 22, I was able to plop in from the Customize interface.
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# ? Jun 29, 2013 03:43 |
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Wheany posted:Who the gently caress designed the sync feature? I reinstalled my Windows and browsers. On Opera, I have to delete all the preinstalled bookmarks and speed dial entries (so that they will not be synced on other devices, which is frankly bullshit), but after that I just use my username and password and it will download my bookmarks and speed dials and passwords and whatever. In Chrome, the same thing. Sign in using my username and password, get bookmarks (and extensions and some other stuff) Firefox Sync is secure, unlike Chrome or Opera. Nobody can access your data besides you, because that gigantic mysterious string you're whining about is the crypto key protecting your data before it gets uploaded to your account on the Mozilla Sync server.
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# ? Jun 29, 2013 04:31 |
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Okay, FF23 is just really unreasonably fast. I've tended to use it in spite of its performance, and not because of it, but this is blowing Chrome out of the water on this machine. I don't remember a browser feeling this snappy compared to other browsers on my machine since the first time I tried Opera 6.
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# ? Jun 29, 2013 05:13 |
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pseudorandom name posted:Firefox Sync is secure, unlike Chrome or Opera. Nobody can access your data besides you, because that gigantic mysterious string you're whining about is the crypto key protecting your data before it gets uploaded to your account on the Mozilla Sync server. I never remember choosing such a key, at least it's not in my password manager.
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# ? Jun 29, 2013 09:58 |
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Wheany posted:I never remember choosing such a key, at least it's not in my password manager. You don't, it's a hash from the username/email and password you provide as well as god knows what.
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# ? Jun 29, 2013 14:29 |
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The Burning Edge has an overview of the features from Nightly that are now in Aurora 24.
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# ? Jun 29, 2013 17:15 |
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I didn't realize how much I missed being able to customize browser look and feel until I started using firefox again. Never could have done something like this in chrome:
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# ? Jun 29, 2013 20:58 |
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You know the address bar has search built in, right? You haven't needed a dedicated search field for quite a few years now.
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# ? Jun 29, 2013 21:50 |
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The dedicated search field keeps your last search around for future editing, remembers and autocompletes your past search queries, lets you switch search engines on demand and fetches suggestions from the search engine automatically.
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# ? Jun 29, 2013 21:54 |
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Read posted:You know the address bar has search built in, right? You haven't needed a dedicated search field for quite a few years now. In my particular situation a one word query on the omnibar results in looking up https://www.whateverwordityped.com and the DNS server throws an error whereas I can ctrl+K to to get to the search bar and hit enter to open the search results in a new tab.
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# ? Jun 29, 2013 22:01 |
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pseudorandom name posted:The dedicated search field keeps your last search around for future editing, remembers and autocompletes your past search queries, lets you switch search engines on demand and fetches suggestions from the search engine automatically. Yup. It's also needed to use this extension, which is mega useful for my job https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/searchwp/
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# ? Jun 29, 2013 22:05 |
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So I'm told that Youtube changed something with their videos and now I'm no longer able to right click on them > stop, to stop them, the only way I know now to stop them is to either close/reopen the tab I'm on or refresh the page, anyone have a better solution then this?
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# ? Jun 30, 2013 00:23 |
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You just want it to stop downloading? When I hit pause, it automatically stops downloading ahead (and resumes downloading on play). HTML5, if it matters. If you must have it play up to a point but also not let it download anything past that point, you're out of luck but that's a pretty niche circumstance isn't it?
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# ? Jun 30, 2013 01:05 |
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So I whinged a little about how I thought FF 21 was losing the ability to restore sessions. I switched to Chrome for a week or so, which is quite horrid for rendering .gifs and then just this afternoon updated to 22. But anyway after a heat related crash I got my tabs back and it's acting properly. I don't know what if anything was the problem with 21 but it not only couldn't remember my tabs after a crash I had to log back in to everything as well. Very peculiar but I'm glad it's working normally now. tl;dr Firefox 21 was utter garbage that almost put me off it, chrome sucks enough that I gave it another shot
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# ? Jun 30, 2013 03:02 |
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Skuto posted:Set layout.css.devPixelsPerPx to 1.0 instead of -1.0 in about :config. Thank you; I thought I was going loving crazy. Is there an update for Tab Utilities that makes it work on FF22? I miss it Never mind, found it: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-us/firefox/addon/tab-utilities/reviews/
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# ? Jun 30, 2013 07:00 |
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Aleph Null posted:Still not fixed. It normally just hangs indefinitely. When it does actually crash, I have it send in the debug info. Then you should have entries in about :crashes, which will tell you more what's going wrong, and potentially the relevant bug in Bugzilla.
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# ? Jun 30, 2013 08:22 |
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quote:Except if i don't also know some mysterious string (and I don't) Pretty sure it recommends you to make a backup of it when you set up Sync. Wheany posted:I never remember choosing such a key, at least it's not in my password manager. User chosen passwords don't tend to be secure at all, so the long encryption key is generated from a bunch of other random things. As pointed out, the advantage is that no-one, including Mozilla, or the government, can read the data. There is some effort under way to replace this by something that's closer to what users expect (codename PiCl, Profile In The Cloud). Strong cryptography protects your privacy, but if you don't particularly care then it's just a burden compared to the normal "username and password" system.
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# ? Jun 30, 2013 08:34 |
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Skuto posted:User chosen passwords don't tend to be secure at all, so the long encryption key is generated from a bunch of other random things. As pointed out, the advantage is that no-one, including Mozilla, or the government, can read the data. It would be cool if one could choose the server location for the profile backup. E.g. pick a non-US country whose legislature is more concerned with individual privacy.
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# ? Jun 30, 2013 11:34 |
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Well, good news, of all the browser sync methods, Firefox Sync is the only one that lets you run your own server. (Sync still isn't designed for backups, don't use it for that without keeping a copy of your recovery key.)
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# ? Jun 30, 2013 15:28 |
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Is there any way to stop Firefox from dynamically refreshing when you scroll down a page? It's happened for the past couple of versions but I thought it was due to new mouse software I was using. For those who don't get what I'm saying, lets say you are on Facebook and scrolling down, at some point it will refresh the feed and you will lose track of where you are on the page because there's new content on top and it's pushed everything down more. It's not just Facebook, I've seen it on The Verge, Techcrunch and every page that dynamically refreshes.
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# ? Jun 30, 2013 15:35 |
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midnightclimax posted:It would be cool if one could choose the server location for the profile backup. E.g. pick a non-US country whose legislature is more concerned with individual privacy. The data is encrypted on your pc and then send over https, it shouldn't really matter. pseudorandom name posted:Well, good news, of all the browser sync methods, Firefox Sync is the only one that lets you run your own server. (Sync still isn't designed for backups, don't use it for that without keeping a copy of your recovery key.) I tried that for like half a year, it's not worth the hassle.
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# ? Jun 30, 2013 15:36 |
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Ryokurin posted:Is there any way to stop Firefox from dynamically refreshing when you scroll down a page? It's happened for the past couple of versions but I thought it was due to new mouse software I was using. For those who don't get what I'm saying, lets say you are on Facebook and scrolling down, at some point it will refresh the feed and you will lose track of where you are on the page because there's new content on top and it's pushed everything down more. It's not just Facebook, I've seen it on The Verge, Techcrunch and every page that dynamically refreshes. Firefox in general, not likely. Facebook specifically, the Social Fixer extension can do that.
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# ? Jun 30, 2013 17:41 |
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pseudorandom name posted:The dedicated search field keeps your last search around for future editing, remembers and autocompletes your past search queries, lets you switch search engines on demand and fetches suggestions from the search engine automatically. I'm glad I'm not the only person left that prefers having the option of a seperate search field. I hope the browser's configuration allows an extension to enable one after Australis is released in a couple versions. I seriously don't understand the advantages of an omnibar considering that you can search directly from the main address as well if you prefer.
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# ? Jun 30, 2013 18:14 |
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Read posted:You know the address bar has search built in, right? You haven't needed a dedicated search field for quite a few years now. I vastly prefer a dedicated search box.
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# ? Jun 30, 2013 19:08 |
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Skuto posted:Pretty sure it recommends you to make a backup of it when you set up Sync. Well, that is a possibility, but like I said, I haven't stored such a key in my password manager. Skuto posted:User chosen passwords don't tend to be secure at all, so the long encryption key is generated from a bunch of other random things. As pointed out, the advantage is that no-one, including Mozilla, or the government, can read the data. Well, I don't think that really sounds like a good reason to not have the option for the user to choose their own key. e: After copying my profile from the old disk, I have now added the recovery key into the password manager. Wheany fucked around with this message at 19:25 on Jun 30, 2013 |
# ? Jun 30, 2013 19:21 |
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Wheany posted:Well, that is a possibility, but like I said, I haven't stored such a key in my password manager. The reason is that usually you wouldn't need the key , just another already synced firefox. You then enter the 3x4 keys your browser displays on the first FF and off you go, no key needed.
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# ? Jun 30, 2013 21:58 |
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Wheany posted:Well, I don't think that really sounds like a good reason to not have the option for the user to choose their own key. "Please enter an encryption key that has at least 256 bits of (random) entropy." I don't think adding such an option is a good plan. To get an idea, here's a page that estimates the strength of user-chosen keys: http://rumkin.com/tools/password/passchk.php Passwords are really beyond terrible at securing things.
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# ? Jul 1, 2013 14:16 |
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# ? May 16, 2024 19:03 |
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Sereri posted:The data is encrypted on your pc and then send over https, it shouldn't really matter. Well it's more a political choice than a technological one. No matter the encryption process used, as a european citizen I'd prefer anything remotely personal to reside on a EU-server. But whatevs, I guess this is a derail and more appropriate for D&D threads.
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# ? Jul 1, 2013 14:31 |