![]() It’s just mystifies me why they don’t provide those things themselves the way they did in the Firefox 68 and prior era. I appreciate that they are there to use as a base for a browser that is more in line with what I’m looking for. Firefox brought added in an option for square tabs that was initially based on Iceraven code relatively early in the Firefox 69+ era.) or write their own code to do the same things their own way. If they did, they could use the Iceraven code (It’s open-source. That adding those type of things back in only takes a little bit of code tells you that the Mozilla Firefox team doesn’t want users of the stable version to have them. It’s a small project and can’t make huge changes in those areas, but even little things like having the option to show full URLs all the time (i.e. The difference is that Iceraven adds in options, customizability, and extendability where it can, and tries to show users what their browser is doing in relation to visited websites. The one thing I like about Firefox for Android these days is that it provides a solid base for Iceraven, which admittedly gets the vast majority of it’s code and the core of it’s updates from them. ![]() Now they have, what, 15? More if you agree to test their nightly or beta versions and then go through all these weird steps. They went from thousands to seven that day. Designed to be easy to use, yet powerful and flexible, GnuCash allows you to track bank accounts, stocks, income and expenses. That version of Firefox created a lot of issues with Firefox for Android that still haven’t been cleaned up years later. GnuCash is personal and small-business financial-accounting software, freely licensed under the GNU GPL and available for GNU/Linux, BSD, Solaris, Mac OS X and Microsoft Windows. I’ve been using it since it started way back when Firefox 69 was released. This is where Iceraven’s latest releases can be downloaded: ![]() Most people don’t feel the need to- Iceraven has like 50 or 100 add-ons available, which cover most of the popular ones that are compatible with current Android browsers and even a few that aren’t! :) The ones that aren’t don’t work, obviously, but you’re free to try them. If you need something not in Iceraven’s extended list, can request it on their GitHub, or swap out Iceraven’s default add-ons list for your own if you want to create one the way people do for their Nightly browser. No switching to less stable versions of the browser, creating Mozilla accounts to make a list on their website, or any secret codes involving clicking on logos three times and such required. ![]() You pick which one you want to use, or you can use neither. Same goes for LocalCDN and Decentraleyes. Violentmonkey, and Tampermoney for that matter, are both available on Iceraven, which is a fork of Firefox stable that includes a large collection of recommended add-ons by default (Hamburger menu>Add-ons) that you only need to click the “+” next to each to enable. ![]()
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