Firefox
The latest news and developments on Firefox and Mozilla, a global non-profit that strives to promote openness, innovation and opportunity on the web.
You can subscribe to this community from any Kbin or Lemmy instance:
Related
- Firefox Customs: [email protected]
- Thunderbird: [email protected]
Rules
While we are not an official Mozilla community, we have adopted the Mozilla Community Participation Guidelines as far as it can be applied to a bin.
Rules
-
Always be civil and respectful
Don't be toxic, hostile, or a troll, especially towards Mozilla employees. This includes gratuitous use of profanity. -
Don't be a bigot
No form of bigotry will be tolerated. -
Don't post security compromising suggestions
If you do, include an obvious and clear warning. -
Don't post conspiracy theories
Especially ones about nefarious intentions or funding. If you're concerned: Ask. Please don’t fuel conspiracy thinking here. Don’t try to spread FUD, especially against reliable privacy-enhancing software. Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. Show credible sources. -
Don't accuse others of shilling
Send honest concerns to the moderators and/or admins, and we will investigate. -
Do not remove your help posts after they receive replies
Half the point of asking questions in a public sub is so that everyone can benefit from the answers—which is impossible if you go deleting everything behind yourself once you've gotten yours.
view the rest of the comments
I’m sure there’s something out there, but I don’t know what it is. I would encourage your friend to try it out as is. If they try to make Firefox look and feel like Chrome then they will inevitably just want Chrome back. Instead, if they try out things from the Firefox way of doing it they will actually see if they like it for what it truly is. At least, I’ve found the most success with browsers that way, let them shine for what they are and see which I like. Change is always hard, especially in something you use for hours on end every day, but maybe with your encouragement they will be open to it.
Unfortunately this friend is extremely autistic and is having a full-blown panic meltdown due to "they can't see all their tabs without clicking a button". I've been encouraging them for several years to slowly migrate to firefox as they've been suffering crippling performance issues and memory leaks with chrome, but instead of heeding my advice (to slowly acclimate themselves to differences like this) they just found a tutorial to import everything at once and now they're overwhelmed with all the differences happening at once and panicking.
I found the browser.tabs.tabMinWidth setting in about:config and suggested they set that to 0 but it's only a compromise at best and I doubt they will end up sticking with firefox at this rate to be honest.
Why though it doesn't even make sense. If you're keeping a mental track of the ordering of the tabs, at that point you may as well utilize the bookmark tab and have it set to "always visible". You can use folders, and strip the bookmark down to just the icon if you want.
Having all those tabs open is accomplishing the same thing, because those tabs aren't active anymore. Chrome will disconenct those tabs otherwise your computer will die.
For firefox, especially if he cares for perserving the order of the tabs, he's probably like that one extention that puts them in containers. If he wants the ordering to be one linear set, then probably the best option is to have a way to show it as a list. I'm not near my computer now but if you right click on the arrow, I'm pretty sure it shows you a list.. and clicking on the tab won't take it out of the order.