pa4wdh wrote:but mozilla's recent choices make me curious for other browsers
Similar, though I wouldn't typify it as "recent", more a compilation of dubiously motivated choices over the last decade.
I stopped using {firefox,librewolf} as my "daily driver" some time back, upstream did something to make it aesthetically offensive to me, so it currently sits around as "a management GUI for ancient username/password combinations", and a fallback for badly written/ancient embedded web interfaces.
I've recently noticed they did something to make it less offensive (I don't know what, it just looks less offensive), and with the recent chrome/chromium changes I've been paying a little more attention to it.
There used to be a palpable delay between FF releases and Librewolf, but if as bstaletic says
both tracking firefox:rapid
is true, and at a rate that isn't glacial, then I'm up for giving LibreWolf another try, I know the days of my favourite extensions are numbered within my current browser choice (Vivaldi), no matter how attached I am to the QOL features it has, if I start seeing adds on youtube again I'll be forced to drop it (the only reason I kicked Falkon to the curb all those years ago).
As much as I might disagree with with mozilla's motivation for certain choices, the need for a viable alternative to chromium in the marketplace (read: why we *need* Gecko) is more important than my personal feelings IMHO, so LibreWolf get points for not "no longer not being evil".
EDIT:
>Be me
>Enable librewolf overlay
>Issue emerge -pv command to check it out
>Has dubiously named "clang" use flag set as dubious default
>Knows it will take more than eight times as long to compile using clang
>Assumes ebuild was written by chatgpt
>Disable overlay
>Opens Vivaldi to share and highlight absurdity