#firefoxforandroid — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #firefoxforandroid, aggregated by home.social.
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Bon à savoir : quand on rate son copier/coller et qu'on met une URL invalide comme « API de suggestions de recherche » (ttp://…), #Fennec crash dès qu'on écrit dans la barre d'adresse. 😅
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Coincidence? 🧐🤪
Since the last update #Fennec constantly crashes on me, when trying to do some tab operations 🙄
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One more step in my X exit: replacing its Android app with a home-screen Web shorcut
Last week, X’s visible presence on my phone was an icon buried in the all-apps list, past where I’d usually scroll in that alphabetical index. This week, X’s icon is lodged next to the calendar widget on one of my home screens, ensuring I’m frequently reminded of that toxic platform. This is an overdue upgrade.
Uninstalling X’s Android app and replacing it with a Web shortcut was the latest step in a spiral of estrangement since Elon Musk began destroying the former Twitter’s value as a medium for real-time information and commentary.
First Musk’s paid membership scheme limited the reach of tweets from people who didn’t feel inclined to give the world’s richest man $8 a month while elevating some of the stupider people on the Internet into our replies. Then him inviting loathsome conspiracy liar Alex Jones back on terminated my own interest in supporting the platform with more free writing–leading to my switching to Bluesky as my primary public notebook.
Musk’s own descent into conspiracy lies led me to yank the app’s remaining permissions and turn off the notifications that had stopped enlightening me to useful activity on the platform. Seeing this tech oligarch then turn X, as the Washington Post’s Will Oremus put it, into a digital Mar-a-Lago that he rules as a two-bit tyrant left me realizing that I was starting to see the app as more of a threat than a distraction.
(The ransacking of the digital and HR infrastructure of multiple federal agencies by Musk and his minions–with him scoffing online while leaving humans abroad in the blast zone–has not improved my judgment of the unelected plutocrat who seems to think he’s starring in a buddy flick with President Trump.)
I do still have to read X as part of my job. But Android1 provides a safer way to use a service that you may no longer deem trustworthy: saving a home-screen shortcut to a site that looks and generally functions like an app.
But a Web-app shortcut benefits from the better security defenses of a browser–and, since I created this shortcut in Firefox for Android, it also gets stronger privacy protections than what Chrome for Android would provide. These make Web shortcuts a good harm-reduction option that more people should consider. So that’s how I now have an X icon badged with a small Firefox logo next to my calendar widget, since I can’t park a Web shortcut in the all-apps list.
All this is more than I can say for another short-form social app under the control of a different tech billionaire who made his own public conversion to Trump courtier: Meta’s Threads. I don’t have time for a vapid platform that, unlike Facebook and Instagram, doesn’t connect me to friends or family, so I deleted that app from my phone without bothering to save a Web shortcut. I don’t miss it.
- Apple provides a similar Web-shortcut feature in iOS and iPadOS, but those operating systems also provide app-privacy protections unavailable in Android. That’s why I’ve yet to subject X’s iPad app to the same eviction as its Android app, although after writing this post I am leaning towards doing so. ↩︎
#AddAppToHomeScreen #ElonMusk #FirefoxForAndroid #harmReduction #MarkZuckerberg #oligarch #Threads #Twitter #WebApp #websiteShortcut #X #XAndroidApp
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One more step in my X exit: replacing its Android app with a home-screen Web shorcut
Last week, X’s visible presence on my phone was an icon buried in the all-apps list, past where I’d usually scroll in that alphabetical index. This week, X’s icon is lodged next to the calendar widget on one of my home screens, ensuring I’m frequently reminded of that toxic platform. This is an overdue upgrade.
Uninstalling X’s Android app and replacing it with a Web shortcut was the latest step in a spiral of estrangement since Elon Musk began destroying the former Twitter’s value as a medium for real-time information and commentary.
First Musk’s paid membership scheme limited the reach of tweets from people who didn’t feel inclined to give the world’s richest man $8 a month while elevating some of the stupider people on the Internet into our replies. Then him inviting loathsome conspiracy liar Alex Jones back on terminated my own interest in supporting the platform with more free writing–leading to my switching to Bluesky as my primary public notebook.
Musk’s own descent into conspiracy lies led me to yank the app’s remaining permissions and turn off the notifications that had stopped enlightening me to useful activity on the platform. Seeing this tech oligarch then turn X, as the Washington Post’s Will Oremus put it, into a digital Mar-a-Lago that he rules as a two-bit tyrant left me realizing that I was starting to see the app as more of a threat than a distraction.
(The ransacking of the digital and HR infrastructure of multiple federal agencies by Musk and his minions–with him scoffing online while leaving humans abroad in the blast zone–has not improved my judgment of the unelected plutocrat who seems to think he’s starring in a buddy flick with President Trump.)
I do still have to read X as part of my job. But Android1 provides a safer way to use a service that you may no longer deem trustworthy: saving a home-screen shortcut to a site that looks and generally functions like an app.
But a Web-app shortcut benefits from the better security defenses of a browser–and, since I created this shortcut in Firefox for Android, it also gets stronger privacy protections than what Chrome for Android would provide. These make Web shortcuts a good harm-reduction option that more people should consider. So that’s how I now have an X icon badged with a small Firefox logo next to my calendar widget, since I can’t park a Web shortcut in the all-apps list.
All this is more than I can say for another short-form social app under the control of a different tech billionaire who made his own public conversion to Trump courtier: Meta’s Threads. I don’t have time for a vapid platform that, unlike Facebook and Instagram, doesn’t connect me to friends or family, so I deleted that app from my phone without bothering to save a Web shortcut. I don’t miss it.
- Apple provides a similar Web-shortcut feature in iOS and iPadOS, but those operating systems also provide app-privacy protections unavailable in Android. That’s why I’ve yet to subject X’s iPad app to the same eviction as its Android app, although after writing this post I am leaning towards doing so. ↩︎
#AddAppToHomeScreen #ElonMusk #FirefoxForAndroid #harmReduction #MarkZuckerberg #oligarch #Threads #Twitter #WebApp #websiteShortcut #X #XAndroidApp
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One more step in my X exit: replacing its Android app with a home-screen Web shorcut
Last week, X’s visible presence on my phone was an icon buried in the all-apps list, past where I’d usually scroll in that alphabetical index. This week, X’s icon is lodged next to the calendar widget on one of my home screens, ensuring I’m frequently reminded of that toxic platform. This is an overdue upgrade.
Uninstalling X’s Android app and replacing it with a Web shortcut was the latest step in a spiral of estrangement since Elon Musk began destroying the former Twitter’s value as a medium for real-time information and commentary.
First Musk’s paid membership scheme limited the reach of tweets from people who didn’t feel inclined to give the world’s richest man $8 a month while elevating some of the stupider people on the Internet into our replies. Then him inviting loathsome conspiracy liar Alex Jones back on terminated my own interest in supporting the platform with more free writing–leading to my switching to Bluesky as my primary public notebook.
Musk’s own descent into conspiracy lies led me to yank the app’s remaining permissions and turn off the notifications that had stopped enlightening me to useful activity on the platform. Seeing this tech oligarch then turn X, as the Washington Post’s Will Oremus put it, into a digital Mar-a-Lago that he rules as a two-bit tyrant left me realizing that I was starting to see the app as more of a threat than a distraction.
(The ransacking of the digital and HR infrastructure of multiple federal agencies by Musk and his minions–with him scoffing online while leaving humans abroad in the blast zone–has not improved my judgment of the unelected plutocrat who seems to think he’s starring in a buddy flick with President Trump.)
I do still have to read X as part of my job. But Android1 provides a safer way to use a service that you may no longer deem trustworthy: saving a home-screen shortcut to a site that looks and generally functions like an app.
But a Web-app shortcut benefits from the better security defenses of a browser–and, since I created this shortcut in Firefox for Android, it also gets stronger privacy protections than what Chrome for Android would provide. These make Web shortcuts a good harm-reduction option that more people should consider. So that’s how I now have an X icon badged with a small Firefox logo next to my calendar widget, since I can’t park a Web shortcut in the all-apps list.
All this is more than I can say for another short-form social app under the control of a different tech billionaire who made his own public conversion to Trump courtier: Meta’s Threads. I don’t have time for a vapid platform that, unlike Facebook and Instagram, doesn’t connect me to friends or family, so I deleted that app from my phone without bothering to save a Web shortcut. I don’t miss it.
- Apple provides a similar Web-shortcut feature in iOS and iPadOS, but those operating systems also provide app-privacy protections unavailable in Android. That’s why I’ve yet to subject X’s iPad app to the same eviction as its Android app, although after writing this post I am leaning towards doing so. ↩︎
#AddAppToHomeScreen #ElonMusk #FirefoxForAndroid #harmReduction #MarkZuckerberg #oligarch #Threads #Twitter #WebApp #websiteShortcut #X #XAndroidApp
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One more step in my X exit: replacing its Android app with a home-screen Web shorcut
Last week, X’s visible presence on my phone was an icon buried in the all-apps list, past where I’d usually scroll in that alphabetical index. This week, X’s icon is lodged next to the calendar widget on one of my home screens, ensuring I’m frequently reminded of that toxic platform. This is an overdue upgrade.
Uninstalling X’s Android app and replacing it with a Web shortcut was the latest step in a spiral of estrangement since Elon Musk began destroying the former Twitter’s value as a medium for real-time information and commentary.
First Musk’s paid membership scheme limited the reach of tweets from people who didn’t feel inclined to give the world’s richest man $8 a month while elevating some of the stupider people on the Internet into our replies. Then him inviting loathsome conspiracy liar Alex Jones back on terminated my own interest in supporting the platform with more free writing–leading to my switching to Bluesky as my primary public notebook.
Musk’s own descent into conspiracy lies led me to yank the app’s remaining permissions and turn off the notifications that had stopped enlightening me to useful activity on the platform. Seeing this tech oligarch then turn X, as the Washington Post’s Will Oremus put it, into a digital Mar-a-Lago that he rules as a two-bit tyrant left me realizing that I was starting to see the app as more of a threat than a distraction.
(The ransacking of the digital and HR infrastructure of multiple federal agencies by Musk and his minions–with him scoffing online while leaving humans abroad in the blast zone–has not improved my judgment of the unelected plutocrat who seems to think he’s starring in a buddy flick with President Trump.)
I do still have to read X as part of my job. But Android1 provides a safer way to use a service that you may no longer deem trustworthy: saving a home-screen shortcut to a site that looks and generally functions like an app.
But a Web-app shortcut benefits from the better security defenses of a browser–and, since I created this shortcut in Firefox for Android, it also gets stronger privacy protections than what Chrome for Android would provide. These make Web shortcuts a good harm-reduction option that more people should consider. So that’s how I now have an X icon badged with a small Firefox logo next to my calendar widget, since I can’t park a Web shortcut in the all-apps list.
All this is more than I can say for another short-form social app under the control of a different tech billionaire who made his own public conversion to Trump courtier: Meta’s Threads. I don’t have time for a vapid platform that, unlike Facebook and Instagram, doesn’t connect me to friends or family, so I deleted that app from my phone without bothering to save a Web shortcut. I don’t miss it.
- Apple provides a similar Web-shortcut feature in iOS and iPadOS, but those operating systems also provide app-privacy protections unavailable in Android. That’s why I’ve yet to subject X’s iPad app to the same eviction as its Android app, although after writing this post I am leaning towards doing so. ↩︎
#AddAppToHomeScreen #ElonMusk #FirefoxForAndroid #harmReduction #oligarch #Threads #TikTok #Twitter #WebApp #websiteShortcut #X #XAndroidApp
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One more step in my X exit: replacing its Android app with a home-screen Web shorcut
Last week, X’s visible presence on my phone was an icon buried in the all-apps list, past where I’d usually scroll in that alphabetical index. This week, X’s icon is lodged next to the calendar widget on one of my home screens, ensuring I’m frequently reminded of that toxic platform. This is an overdue upgrade.
Uninstalling X’s Android app and replacing it with a Web shortcut was the latest step in a spiral of estrangement since Elon Musk began destroying the former Twitter’s value as a medium for real-time information and commentary.
First Musk’s paid membership scheme limited the reach of tweets from people who didn’t feel inclined to give the world’s richest man $8 a month while elevating some of the stupider people on the Internet into our replies. Then him inviting loathsome conspiracy liar Alex Jones back on terminated my own interest in supporting the platform with more free writing–leading to my switching to Bluesky as my primary public notebook.
Musk’s own descent into conspiracy lies led me to yank the app’s remaining permissions and turn off the notifications that had stopped enlightening me to useful activity on the platform. Seeing this tech oligarch then turn X, as the Washington Post’s Will Oremus put it, into a digital Mar-a-Lago that he rules as a two-bit tyrant left me realizing that I was starting to see the app as more of a threat than a distraction.
(The ransacking of the digital and HR infrastructure of multiple federal agencies by Musk and his minions–with him scoffing online while leaving humans abroad in the blast zone–has not improved my judgment of the unelected plutocrat who seems to think he’s starring in a buddy flick with President Trump.)
I do still have to read X as part of my job. But Android1 provides a safer way to use a service that you may no longer deem trustworthy: saving a home-screen shortcut to a site that looks and generally functions like an app.
But a Web-app shortcut benefits from the better security defenses of a browser–and, since I created this shortcut in Firefox for Android, it also gets stronger privacy protections than what Chrome for Android would provide. These make Web shortcuts a good harm-reduction option that more people should consider. So that’s how I now have an X icon badged with a small Firefox logo next to my calendar widget, since I can’t park a Web shortcut in the all-apps list.
All this is more than I can say for another short-form social app under the control of a different tech billionaire who made his own public conversion to Trump courtier: Meta’s Threads. I don’t have time for a vapid platform that, unlike Facebook and Instagram, doesn’t connect me to friends or family, so I deleted that app from my phone without bothering to save a Web shortcut. I don’t miss it.
- Apple provides a similar Web-shortcut feature in iOS and iPadOS, but those operating systems also provide app-privacy protections unavailable in Android. That’s why I’ve yet to subject X’s iPad app to the same eviction as its Android app, although after writing this post I am leaning towards doing so. ↩︎
#AddAppToHomeScreen #ElonMusk #FirefoxForAndroid #harmReduction #MarkZuckerberg #oligarch #Threads #Twitter #WebApp #websiteShortcut #X #XAndroidApp
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CW: Der Entwickler vom Firefox Fork Mull wird den Browser wohl nicht mehr weiterentwickeln
#Firefox128 is out today with 20 security fixes. I encourage you all to switch to another #browser if you use #Mull, such as #Brave as configured per https://divestos.org/pages/browsers#tuningBrave
I say this because I am not going to work on #Mull128 as it stands. #Mozilla has repeatedly for years now constantly made compiling #Firefox for #Android from source increasingly difficult. And now there is a second circular dependency which I do not care to handle.
And if this means your choices for a browser all contain proprietary code, then you might as well use one with the most protections available at leastNot Mozilla's user-hostile approach which is Firefox for Android.
extensions? no. about:config? no. actual security features? no.
@mozilla does not care.
Does Brave just want your money and cryptoshit scams? Yes, but at least they have strong privacy features and they inherit the security features of Chromium.
Ultimately Mozilla doesn't care if #FirefoxforAndroid can be compiled from source
If someone still wants something like #Fennec F-Droid or Mull they need to put the work inI've been doing it 7 years now and @relan has done it even longer
I don't see anyone else trying
every single other firefox fork on android contains proprietary blobs, including tor browser of all projects you'd expect not tothey don't care either somehow
compilation of 127 is: #fenix < android components < #gecko < application services < android components (older) < glean < glean (older) < wasi126 moved android components into gecko but still depended on an older version that was not in gecko and could be compiled standalone
but not 128 needs a newer but still older version that is now in gecko which means gecko needs to be compiledso likely solution to compile 128 is: fenix < android components < gecko < application services < android components (older) < gecko (older) < application services (even older) < android components (even older) < glean (even older) < etc.
do you see the loop there?
they expect you to just use their prebuilt older versions
you effectively would always have to bootstrap from that 126 version
you can't do this
it is fucked
Quelle: @divested
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TIL that #FirefoxForAndroid does not support #HTMLDragAndDrop 😢
It never occurred to me until I was implementing Atlassian's Pragmatic drag and drop and tested on my phone this morning
https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1764177 -
opera gx added mods to mobile so i was like okay let's see what this is
turns out they disabled all the cool stuff on mobile, turning it into a glorified theme store
i thought this was lame, so against my better judgement, i've ported GX Mods to Android.
i wouldn't recommend using background music as it's extremely RAM hungry, but browser and keyboard sounds are kinda fun to have!! okay thats all thanks bye
(GO GO GADGET PROMOTE MY CONTENT #webextension #webextensions #extensions #extension #firefox #firefoxmobile #firefoxforandroid) -
Moving to a combo of a #PinePhonePro and a #Pixel phone with #LineageOS sans #GApps. I ❤️ @bitwarden, but their options are... rough.
No #Google means the #FirefoxForAndroid extension can't access vaults. The webpage / #PWA is 100% not mobile responsive (in 2024!). Ditto the #Linux app. There's no #Android app in #FDroid despite, iirc, the client being #FOSS?
At least make the website mobile friendly. A non GApps extension/client would go a long, long way, too though.
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Also, as always, of course the extensions are customisable as usual. Even on #Android.
#firefox4android #Firefox #firefoxForAndroid #browserExtension #webExtension #browserAddon #extensionDevelopment #webdev #mozilla
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Also, as always, of course the extensions are customisable as usual. Even on #Android.
#firefox4android #Firefox #firefoxForAndroid #browserExtension #webExtension #browserAddon #extensionDevelopment #webdev #mozilla
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Also, as always, of course the extensions are customisable as usual. Even on #Android.
#firefox4android #Firefox #firefoxForAndroid #browserExtension #webExtension #browserAddon #extensionDevelopment #webdev #mozilla
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Also, as always, of course the extensions are customisable as usual. Even on #Android.
#firefox4android #Firefox #firefoxForAndroid #browserExtension #webExtension #browserAddon #extensionDevelopment #webdev #mozilla
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Also, as always, of course the extensions are customisable as usual. Even on #Android.
#firefox4android #Firefox #firefoxForAndroid #browserExtension #webExtension #browserAddon #extensionDevelopment #webdev #mozilla
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I don't see a big reason why you would use that on mobile phones with good emoji pickers already, but, heck, theoretically even my #AwesomeEmojiPicker extension is compatible with Firefox for Android now!😅
#emoji #emojiPicker #firefox #firefox4android #firefoxForAndroid #mozilla #unicode #utf8 #encoding #browserExtension #browserAddon
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I don't see a big reason why you would use that on mobile phones with good emoji pickers already, but, heck, theoretically even my #AwesomeEmojiPicker extension is compatible with Firefox for Android now!😅
#emoji #emojiPicker #firefox #firefox4android #firefoxForAndroid #mozilla #unicode #utf8 #encoding #browserExtension #browserAddon
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I don't see a big reason why you would use that on mobile phones with good emoji pickers already, but, heck, theoretically even my #AwesomeEmojiPicker extension is compatible with Firefox for Android now!😅
#emoji #emojiPicker #firefox #firefox4android #firefoxForAndroid #mozilla #unicode #utf8 #encoding #browserExtension #browserAddon
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I don't see a big reason why you would use that on mobile phones with good emoji pickers already, but, heck, theoretically even my #AwesomeEmojiPicker extension is compatible with Firefox for Android now!😅
#emoji #emojiPicker #firefox #firefox4android #firefoxForAndroid #mozilla #unicode #utf8 #encoding #browserExtension #browserAddon
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I don't see a big reason why you would use that on mobile phones with good emoji pickers already, but, heck, theoretically even my #AwesomeEmojiPicker extension is compatible with Firefox for Android now!😅
#emoji #emojiPicker #firefox #firefox4android #firefoxForAndroid #mozilla #unicode #utf8 #encoding #browserExtension #browserAddon
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You can now install many #Firefox add-ons in the #Android version of Firefox (again)!
My #Offline QR code generator #extension is already compatible!
#qrcode #qrcodegenerator #webextension #browser #browseraddon #browserextension #privacy #firefoxForAndroid #firefoxAndroid #firefoxAndroidAddons #androidFirefox #firefox4android #mozilla
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You can now install many #Firefox add-ons in the #Android version of Firefox (again)!
My #Offline QR code generator #extension is already compatible!
#qrcode #qrcodegenerator #webextension #browser #browseraddon #browserextension #privacy #firefoxForAndroid #firefoxAndroid #firefoxAndroidAddons #androidFirefox #firefox4android #mozilla
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You can now install many #Firefox add-ons in the #Android version of Firefox (again)!
My #Offline QR code generator #extension is already compatible!
#qrcode #qrcodegenerator #webextension #browser #browseraddon #browserextension #privacy #firefoxForAndroid #firefoxAndroid #firefoxAndroidAddons #androidFirefox #firefox4android #mozilla
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You can now install many #Firefox add-ons in the #Android version of Firefox (again)!
My #Offline QR code generator #extension is already compatible!
#qrcode #qrcodegenerator #webextension #browser #browseraddon #browserextension #privacy #firefoxForAndroid #firefoxAndroid #firefoxAndroidAddons #androidFirefox #firefox4android #mozilla
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You can now install many #Firefox add-ons in the #Android version of Firefox (again)!
My #Offline QR code generator #extension is already compatible!
#qrcode #qrcodegenerator #webextension #browser #browseraddon #browserextension #privacy #firefoxForAndroid #firefoxAndroid #firefoxAndroidAddons #androidFirefox #firefox4android #mozilla
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Firefox for Android is adding support for 400+ add-ons #Addons, #Android, #Firefox, #FirefoxForAndroid, #Mozilla, #WebBrowsers
https://liliputing.com/firefox-for-android-is-adding-support-for-400-add-ons/
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Firefox for Android is adding support for 400+ add-ons
Desktop web browsers have long supported add-ons and extensions that change the user interface, add features, or otherwise change the behavior of the browser. But it’s more rare to find a mobile browser with support for third-party add-ons.
Firefox is one of the exceptions. Firefox for Android first added support for add-ons in 2011, but when […]https://liliputing.com/?p=164651
#addOns #android #firefox #firefoxForAndroid #mozilla #webBrowsers
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#Firefox für #Android: Beliebige Erweiterungen ab Version 120 im Dezember | heise online https://www.heise.de/news/Firefox-fuer-Android-Beliebige-Erweiterungen-ab-Version-120-im-Dezember-9353919.html #Mozilla #FirefoxForAndroid #Firefox4Android #Firefox120
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#Firefox für #Android: Beliebige Erweiterungen ab Version 120 im Dezember | heise online https://www.heise.de/news/Firefox-fuer-Android-Beliebige-Erweiterungen-ab-Version-120-im-Dezember-9353919.html #Mozilla #FirefoxForAndroid #Firefox4Android #Firefox120
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#Firefox für #Android: Beliebige Erweiterungen ab Version 120 im Dezember | heise online https://www.heise.de/news/Firefox-fuer-Android-Beliebige-Erweiterungen-ab-Version-120-im-Dezember-9353919.html #Mozilla #FirefoxForAndroid #Firefox4Android #Firefox120
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Usando Firefox Beta (o Nightly, che sconsiglio perché potrebbe essere più instabile), è possibile aggiungere una lista custom di #addons.
Come spiegato qui, si attiva il menu debug e si ottiene il modo di inserire una collezione custom: https://www.maketecheasier.com/install-addon-firefox-android/
Questa la mia #collezione con addon per me essenziali, se vi torna utile: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/collections/18049170/octollection/
#Consiglio #FirefoxForAndroid #FirefoxAndroid #Mozilla #MozillaFirefox #FirefoxMobile
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I just learned how to get #Firefox on #Android to run my favorite add-ons, including #BypassPaywallsClean.
Step 1: Download Firefox for Android Nightly: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=org.mozilla.fenix
Step 2: Create a Firefox account or log into your existing Firefox account.
Step 3: Create a collection on AMO (this can be done on the desktop): https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/how-use-collections-addonsmozillaorg
Step 4: Enable debug mode in Firefox for Android Nightly and configure it for Custom Add-on Collection: https://blog.mozilla.org/addons/2020/09/29/expanded-extension-support-in-firefox-for-android-nightly/
Step 5: Firefox for Android Nightly -> Settings -> Add-ons -> Add-ons Manager. Voila!
Now I can read articles from the Wall Street Journal and other sites on my phone again.
#FirefoxForAndroidNightly #FirefoxForAndroid #Paywall #PaywallBypass
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For all #Android #Firefox users, the nightly version recently enabled some new #Addons. #FirefoxRelay, #Tampermonkey, #ReadAloud, #AdNauseam, and #ClearURLs.
More info at https://www.ghacks.net/2022/12/19/firefox-for-android-nightly-adds-support-for-5-more-extensions/
#FirefoxAddons, #FirefoxAddon, #FirefoxExtensions, #FirefoxExtension, #FirefoxForAndroid, #FirefoxOnAndroid, #AndroidFirefox, #Fenix, #Mozilla.
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Mozilla hat gegen verschiedenen Angriffe abgesicherte Versionen von Firefox, Firefox for Android, Firefox ESR und Thunderbird veröffentlicht. Firefox und Thunderbird: Websitebesuch kann unter Android gefährlich werden -
On that btw: #FirefoxForAndroid is internally called #Fennec, which is a beautiful name and appropriate for a very different piece of software, but almost completely unknown publicly.
Similarly #Fenix was quickly renamed to #FirefoxPreview after release. -
Es ist so ätzend, wenn Du Dir in #FirefoxforAndroid oder #orfox Tabs zum späteren lesen öffnest und die Inhalte lädst - und kaum, dass das Netz mal wechselt, vergisst der Kack-#Browser alles und besteht darauf, dass er alles neu laden muss. Grade in #Funkloch-Deutschland ist das echt ein Schmerz im Gesäß! 😡