

2·
3 days agoSorry, you hit your message limit for the free tier of KrillAI. Upgrade to the Gold tier of KrillAI to gain unlimited messaging. Toodloo!
Sorry, you hit your message limit for the free tier of KrillAI. Upgrade to the Gold tier of KrillAI to gain unlimited messaging. Toodloo!
I disable avatar display on all my clients. Reddit and it’s siblings like Lemmy have historically been less person-focused than other websites, and many of us like to keep it that way. While it can be neat to recognise people, I only need their user handle to do so and I only check if necessary. It’s nice to take a comment at it’s value without regard for who said it. Reddit’s push towards personifying their users is part of why I left.
And scope. Variables declared in the if can be read everywhere, variables declared in the function are limited to that function.
Zen browser at the moment, it includes a lot of UI and UX tweaks that I was already trying to do via CSS and extensions in Firefox, but it does them a lot cleaner. Definitely an opinionated appearance though, won’t be for everyone but so far I am enjoying it. My only gripe has been that I can’t disable workspaces and keeping them active seems to keep a hidden tab open all the time, so closing a window always asks me to confirm “closing 2 tabs” even though I have 1 or none open.
I previously was using Librewolf to disable Mozilla’s tracking, but after it wiped my browsing history and made some weird user agent change which broke almost every website I have given up on it. The extra bit of privacy wasn’t worth the headache, and the TOR-like defaults exemplify that it’s a more hardcore browser than I need. As far as I can Zen browser is about the same as vanilla Firefox for privacy issues, so not perfect but not as bad as Chrome.
I refuse to use anything Chromium anymore, but I tried out a bunch of those as well some years ago. Vivaldi was my favourite for it’s features, but man whatever they did to tweak the UI resulted in a lot of bugs… I had weekly crashes on that browser over two different hardware setups.