Microsoft, the company behind Windows and Xbox are distributing their new Edge built on Chromium engine cross platform. Just recently while browsing my usual tech news sites, I found an article stating that Edge is coming in October of 2020 to Linux as a preview release before the final. Microsoft already had an Edge built on their IE Trident engine, but it was losing in marketshare and failing miserably as an everyday browser. No one was using it, it had sparse plugin and extension support and many were only using it to download Google Chrome. Since Chromium is open source and full of compatibility, it makes sense to use an already established engine with so much support to back end their browser as they focus solely on the UI experience moving forward. Microsoft didn’t stop there though, they also work with Google on the open source Chromium code to make it better suited for their needs as well. In this new iteration of the browser they promise to offer better plugin and extension support as well as a faster and more streamlined user experience. Microsoft once dominated the web until Firefox and later Chrome emerged on the scene and just destroyed the competition. Edge was already still an improvement over the dead Internet Explorer, but Edge previously lacked many things that web users of today sorely needed. Now included in their sudden acceptance of all things Linux, Microsoft also opened up many of their other tools to be utilized in Linux as well. I will be anxious to see what the new Edge for Linux looks like and I will write a review, however, I don’t know as of yet if I would recommend it as a daily browser.
I wrote an article before about making Pale Moon more private. I covered a few of the settings and back end changes I make each time I install it. I mentioned Noscript, but I didn’t give any details about how I set it up. First though, you have to get the version already marked for your version of “Firefox” or in this case, Pale Moon. If you went to https://addons.palemoon.org/addon/noscript/ you would probably find the Pale Moon addons page devoted to the newest possible Noscript being marked specifically for Pale Moon. Other versions may work, but these are hybrid addons and the closer we get to Noscript 10, the less I trust it to work with Pale Moon specifically. I just opt to stick with 5.0.6. There have been people asking about what happens when Maone, the developer stops supporting the hybrid versions of Noscript, “Will it work with Pale Moon?” Why yes it will. Noscript blocks scripts, that’s its main function and it will do that as long as Java script exists on a page. ...
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