XFCE, a very old and lightweight desktop environment, is a flagship of many distributions including Manjaro, Lite, and others. XFCE has always had this touting for being medium to lightweight on lower spec hardware and beyond. XFCE comes with many of its own applications and settings managers and is stable and never gets in a hurry to update and change, that said, the latest release has many new improvements and features to the interface. It brings a new mimetype viewer/editor in default applications menu, a new icon set by default, many improvements to the panel and some performance improvements to the overall compositing of the desktop. Power management has seen some improvements expected to improve battery performance and life on mobile hardware. The panel includes more granular controls and new toggles for things that included a checkbox before. There is a new dark-mode feature for the xfce panel that should help blend with matching wallpapers and help with eye strain. Arch Linux has recently released the new package, but other, more stable distros will likely follow later on down the road.
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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