

this idea lies on a complete misunderstanding. Linux, without extensive hardening efforts, is ootb much more insecure than either Windows or macos
this idea lies on a complete misunderstanding. Linux, without extensive hardening efforts, is ootb much more insecure than either Windows or macos
what do you mean you claim “more secure” here? secure in comparison to what, exactly?
semantics
gotta that post 9/11 public migration sentiment and the massive consequences of the patriot act.
you need to use Firefox beta, nightly, mull, or Fennec F-Droid to access about:config and from there you can search for and enable resistFingerprinting. it’s not an option in the settings.
yes, if you enable resist fingerprinting on any Firefox build it will cap refresh rate to 60hz. Mull is not doing anything special, it’s just changing about:config options by default.
you can disable resist fingerprinting in mull and regain standard refresh rate (although you lose fingerprinting protection) just as you can enable resistFingerprinting in Firefox beta or nightly and see refresh rate cap at 60.
I wholly agree with you there, I’m just saying it’s the same behavior on all browsers built on Firefox. true for desktop as well
it’s worth noting that this is the intended behaviour for privacy.resistFingerprinting. this is not exclusive to Mull.
aosp and android aren’t necessarily one in the same.
just change it yourself
okay buddy
I’m not trolling you’re just demonstrably incorrect.
you’ve posted this same comment at least 5 times and you’ve been wrong every time.
you could have used winget or chocolatey as well.
less crashes, higher average fps, behaves with alt+tab better, etc. everything works ✨better✨
you’re wrong and look stupid.
I love when people post well known and obvious information. if you hadn’t realized metadata is present then idk what to tell you.
you’re explanation makes sense and yet, gaming still works better on kde. it’s a known reality.
aosp code used to be released all in one lump sum at new version launch and Google has actually changed that to being quarterly releases which takes a lot of burden off android based os devs. so things are actively going in the opposite direction you’ve hypothesized here.