Have you tested that? I mean sure it’s not listed in the table but does that mean that
a) absolutely no browser on the planet supports automatic hyphenation in Greek, OR
b) it’s just missing from the table?
Adding Greek to the table won’t actually achieve anything if Greek hyphenation does not work. It will simply be a row in the table saying “not supported”. I guess that’s visibility.
If it really isn’t supported then what is missing is a hyphenation dictionary for Greek i.e. basically a dictionary of words (or word patterns) that gives the valid hyphenation points for each word (or word pattern). (I know zero Greek. Maybe it’s not that simple because every language has its own hyphenation rules. I assume from your question that it is at least valid in Greek to perform automatic hyphenation.)
And nothing happened ever since. It seems that FF has copied hyphenation rules for several languages from CTAN (the TeX archive network) but not for the Greek language for some unknown reason. The license for most of the rules is LPPL. In anycase I opened a bug report here:
and it seems that is accepted (at least not rejected immediately).
I don’t see how most of Firefox users would want to install Rally add on. Most likely FANMG users wouldn’t mind being their guinea pig.
With Rally, Mozilla says it hopes to make a case for an equitable market for data, “one where every party is treated fairly” and “where people understand the value of their data.” In practice, Rally will allow you to share your browsing data with computer scientists and sociologists studying the web.
Idiom actually. Fast foods don’t have much nutritions as to real food. It wouldn’t surprise me if there’s such a thing for diners to get discounts after returning buckets full of their fecal matters from consuming fast foods.
Just want to add this, about disabling Proton on Firefox 89. Previously, I provided: about:config
browser.proton.enabled false
But there are a few other Proton-related settings in about:config, so it’s better to just search for “proton” and then disable them all to restore the menus and controls to their previous state.
I believe it’ll be impossible to disable Proton after FF89, so it’s a short-term fix…unless you decide to freeze it at 89 for a while.
Just disable the new tab ads, disable searches, use about:blank at new tap or homepage and disable every kind of browser history and use umatrix.
Do not have more then two or three taps open at the same time, its bad habit! Use Bookmarks if you need it or write a script or RSS Reader for some pages you have daily open and just press F4… (!). Edit, Typos
Don’t mind, this is normal behaviour, to keep your privacy. I just know folks who have 10 or 20 taps open like for ever! And never do shutdown or reboot the computer.
And every tab try to track you. Every tab on average news pages have one tracking pixel and 100 tracking ips, updated every here and now.
Heads up! According to ghacks.net, in FF91, Mozilla is changing the download/view-save behavior. It will now default to saving the file, without giving you the option to just view it. You then have to manually delete the file if you don’t want to keep it.
Fixable in about:config…
browser.download.improvements_to_download_panel
(Set to false if you don’t want the new behavior.)
“improvements”. I recently had a chat about how browsers utterly fail at bookmarks. Saving by default might have been fine if there was an easy way to organize and search saved files, but viewing and not saving is a way I reduce the noise-to-signal ratio in my downloads directory. I don’t need 30 datasheets for the wrong component that I look at before finding the correct one.
I wonder what the reasoning behind this was.
I moved to FF 91.0, because I modified my style-sheet to fix what annoyed me. Unless I did something wrong, disabling Proton (browser.proton.enabled to ‘false’) seemed to have no affect. What you read seems to be correct.