Sincerely thank you for your effort to safe myself from your browser Now i have to search for alternatives again. is there an estimate milestone to remove things? what do you plan to remove in the future? will you delete/modify profiles? will I be forced to start them with the profilemanger UI? will I be able to load them like now with arguments? Or delete -no-remote to many ff instances can screw up.
and they don't care about the "dear honey the plate is hot don't touch it" warning. Main profile has 20+ tabgroups (A really GOOD function! I applaud you for this one!) and way to many tabs.Īnd when do you remove this option totally? people will fuck around in about:config now. login sites like bank or mail have their totally own profile. addons have their profiles, grouped even. Also I run multiple separate Profiles! all the "oh so dependant javascript social sites" have their own profile with javascript turned on. I always disable javascript in firefox and turn it on when I need it like youtube. That way you know that your stuff works right? It's bullshit and you know it! eh mozilla firefox seminars where you can buy a 50k$ degree for turning options on and off in ff. If you want to save people from them selves than dont point them to way complicated Addons like NoScript or QuickJava! or about:config (where you totally can screw up!!!)
better put in 24h registration ques so you can save myself from typing here. * (to easily disable and enable JavaScript, automatic loading of images, and other content) * (to disable JavaScript on a per page basis, as required) # Right click the result named "javascript.enabled" and click "Toggle". # In the search bar, search for "javascript.enabled" (with no quotes). # In the address bar, type "about:config" (with no quotes), and press Enter. Read this answer in context ? 22 All Replies (8)
You can alternatively install an add-on that lets you disable JavaScript, such as To Re-enable JavaScript, repeat these steps.
Google did change the flag recently that handles TLS. Google Chrome supports TLS 1.3 by default as well. Change the value of the preference to 4 by double-clicking on it.Load about:config in the Firefox address bar. Confirm that you will be careful if the warning screen is shown.
Still, here is the way to make sure that TLS 1.3 is supported: Users had to configure the maximum supported version previously on about:config to add support but that is no longer necessary. If you run the test using Chrome or Firefox Stable right now, you will get a "no" next to TLS 1.3 Enable TLS 1.3 in FirefoxĪll recent versions of Mozilla Firefox support TLS 1.3 already.