Looks like they use html__responsive on other pages, but not U&L. And the non-responsive design has a hardcoded width of minimum 1264px (Which is too wide imo).
Hi all. Anyone knowledgeable in installing kernel modules/drivers ? Need help in installing a tp-link driver in Redhat. unix.stackexchange.com/q/680725/433212
I normally avoid Phoronix but in this instance the article is pretty accurate: Chromium in Debian is unmaintained (or close enough), and Firefox in stable is blocked by a complex chain of updates (which are all individually OK on the face of it, but getting the whole combination working is proving complex).
Regardless of what the article says though, don’t read the forums!
@StephenKitt I guess my question would go something like - if Chromium is unmaintained on Debian stable, what are my options if I want to continue using Chromium on Debian stable?
@FaheemMitha that sounds fair enough. Note that the big difference here between Chromium and Firefox is that Chromium is unmaintained full stop; Firefox is maintained, but getting current Firefox ESR into stable is proving troublesome.
@StephenKitt I understand. I won't ask about Firefox, which appears to be a different situation.
This is all rather unfortunate. There aren't a lot of browser choices out there. And I like to have at least 2 distinct usable browsers available. Though I can well remember the time (Netscape 4.77) where there wasn't even one. I remember Netscape regularly freezing up my system for no reason, which at least does not happen now.
there was a fantastic bug in Netscape 4.78 on SunOS which meant that if you logged out without exiting Netscape, it would continue running and consume as much CPU as it could get
that was the main reason for doing Stop+A boot when I was a student
This all makes me a bit nostalgic for IRC. Which has had its fair share of brickbats, but at least you don't need version numbers to access it reliably.