You are not logged in.
You can probably block Javascript on pages, but then the necessary functions will not work.
That is only true if you use a heavy-handed approach, such as disabling Javascript completely or using an extension like NoScript (with default settings).
I use these extensions:
uBlock Origin
NoScript (with scripts allowed globally).
With that combination, breakage is rare. And when it does occur, it is easily fixed. I usually disable uBlock Origin on websites that involve transactions, like banking and shopping websites, as a proactive measure.
NoScript in the above combination may appear to be redundant, but it's not. Although uBlock Origin does most of the work, NoScript provides protection against cross-site scripting attacks.
Offline
Two people play this game.
My city website first asked to disable *block, then it stopped showing the contents of the page opened via the link from the main page.
Now there’s a new feature, an advertising widget, by clicking on it and selecting “Block...” from the drop-down menu, we get a red rectangle containing not only this widget, but all the main text.
Offline
Falkon piqued my interest but as soon as I found out it was KDE that was it.
Falkon might be a good choice for those people who are using LXQt (or KDE).
I actually installed KDE once in its early days. It didn't last long for the reasons mentioned above and that everything was so 'twitchy' and I would be spending too much time turning off all that ADD-inducing garbage . . .
Several years ago I used an online builder to create a liveCD of openSUSE with a KDE desktop. It was so bloated and slow that it was essentially unusable.
Offline
I have no objection at all to someone using any programs.
But the essence of my thread is that with a weak processor the OS turns into a single-tasking, or rather single-window, if we mean browsers.
And no “light” DEs, browsers, etc. things won't help. If you want normal work, you will have to pay for a more productive computer.
Offline
I have no objection at all to someone using any programs.
But the essence of my thread is that with a weak processor the OS turns into a single-tasking, or rather single-window, if we mean browsers.
And no “light” DEs, browsers, etc. things won't help. If you want normal work, you will have to pay for a more productive computer.
Any recent celeron is better than your cpu, I still have a laptop with an E-450 and performs worse than the ROC-RK3328-CC that I am using to writing this reply with LibreWolf.
Auto quote myself about the RK3328:
What can I do with it?
I do almost anything, and with the Renegade board I can do even more. Although this board support video acceleration your phone is better suited for media consuming. Anyway with my first prototype and the last Stealthbox I was able to do almost anything, a great improvement was achieved whan I was able to boost the tethering allowing me to load heavy-weight website.
This is what it was possible doing with the current Stealthbox and the prototype:
Internet searches ✅
Email reading ✅ (with client, but with 4GB and booster also webmail)
Online banking and bills ✅
Mastodon ✅
Diaspora ✅
Fora (forums) ✅
Amazon, Target, Walmart etc ✅ (with tethering booster)
Projects with Inkscape ✅
Projects with Gimp ✅
LibreOffice ❓ (didn't tested but with 4GB I believe it is feasible)
Abiword ✅
Text Editor ✅
Calibre and connecting a Kindle ✅
Youtube/Invidious/Videos ✅❗(no audio)
Git and Webdav ✅
Compile light software ✅
Netflix/Spotify/etc. ❌ (no DRM)
https://portal.mozz.us/gemini/omg.pebca … ox-faq.gmi
I recently bought a second-hand crapbook (Asus L210MA) for less than $60 and compared with this board and the old laptop looks like a Ferrari.
https://portal.mozz.us/gemini/omg.pebca … vuan-5.gmi
On both systems the disk is encrypted therefore extra workload to do in real time, and they works just fine.
Modern internet is a shit, and webpages are a pile of crap, that's why we publish our content on Gemini. Try Lagrange on your computer and see how fantastic is browsing the Geminispace.
Offline
I have already changed.
About the same money as your ROC-RK3328-CC.
ThinkPad x201, i5-560M, 4GB, 128 SSD.
5 hours new battery, everything works.
Offline
My (old) laptop was already slow back to that time. I bought it just because was one the very first shipped with Linux (SLES) in Italy and was cheap too. Today is useless, even with 6GB of RAM and a SSD, the CPU is a crap. Nothing to add.
With your think pad you got a decent hardware, congrats!
Offline
Thank you.
I think the performance should simply be enough for specific tasks. And they are different for all of us.
I have a ThinkPad for “couch surfing”.
For more serious ones, there is the Ideapad Y500, i7-3630QM/16/256/500/SLI (two identical video cards in parallel).
But it’s heavy, you can’t put it on your belly.
Last edited by aluma (2023-12-12 22:00:53)
Offline
I think falkon is worth it, even if you're not a KDE user. I use it with XFCE without any issues (I just have to eat the Qt5 libraries that come with it). It's what I use most of the time on slow, old laptops.
Iridium browser is also quite nice for compatability.
Offline