by JQW » Thu Dec 08, 2005 10:14 am
Don't like TABS? What's next, you don't like kittens? You're fucking EVIL.
Tabs rule. The best feature of Firefox 1.5 is that you can force pages that open new windows to just open a tab instead.
Regardless - here's a news flash for you - YOU DON'T HAVE TO USE TABS.
Speedwise, 1.5 is indeed faster, and you're batty if you're actually seeing Firefox being noticably slower. I mean, c'mon. Even if it's slower by a couple nanoseconds, it's worth it for all the improvements.
As for hosts. OK, so you find a new ad coming through. You need to go find your hosts file, get a program to open it (since you can't associate it with anything as it has no extension), look at the page source to find the source of the ad, and then put an entry into the hosts file (including a dummy location for it), save the hosts file, then reload the page to see if it blocked it.
Let's compare that to adblock. So you see an ad. Click the tiny adblock button in the corner, it gives you a list of everything blockable, and whether it's a script, image, its node name, etc. Click the offending element, cut it down to what you want to block, and hit OK. It's instantly removed.
Being able to remove URLs helps get rid of crap like "anandtech.com/banners", "nytimes.com/ads", "nytimes.com/adx", "snopes.com/info/ads", "weather.com/common/ads", as well as stuff like "*/RealMedia/ads/*", "*/fuseads/*", and other common folders.
Furthermore, since you have a nice list, you can also block the shit that isn't so obvious but is still screwing around with you. There are lots of click counters and trackers that aren't obvious but are still running on lots of sites. Adblock makes it exceedingly easy to get rid of them.
Furthermore, the pages are usually then collapsed as if the ad never even appeared, and they're usually much easier to read, especially the ones that usually have giant ads in the middle of a block of text. (Common in PC news/review sites, etc.)
It's SO goddamned easy. Futzing with a hosts file is like digging a hole in the backyard to take a crap when there's a toilet sitting inside to just flush the advertisement-laden crap down into. Quicker, easier, BETTER.
Lysander, are you sure there isn't a theme or something that's more agreeable to screenreaders? I'm surprised that you'd be having such problems with Firefox.
Don't like TABS? What's next, you don't like kittens? You're fucking EVIL.
Tabs rule. The best feature of Firefox 1.5 is that you can force pages that open new windows to just open a tab instead.
Regardless - here's a news flash for you - YOU DON'T HAVE TO USE TABS.
Speedwise, 1.5 is indeed faster, and you're batty if you're actually seeing Firefox being noticably slower. I mean, c'mon. Even if it's slower by a couple nanoseconds, it's worth it for all the improvements.
As for hosts. OK, so you find a new ad coming through. You need to go find your hosts file, get a program to open it (since you can't associate it with anything as it has no extension), look at the page source to find the source of the ad, and then put an entry into the hosts file (including a dummy location for it), save the hosts file, then reload the page to see if it blocked it.
Let's compare that to adblock. So you see an ad. Click the tiny adblock button in the corner, it gives you a list of everything blockable, and whether it's a script, image, its node name, etc. Click the offending element, cut it down to what you want to block, and hit OK. It's instantly removed.
Being able to remove URLs helps get rid of crap like "anandtech.com/banners", "nytimes.com/ads", "nytimes.com/adx", "snopes.com/info/ads", "weather.com/common/ads", as well as stuff like "*/RealMedia/ads/*", "*/fuseads/*", and other common folders.
Furthermore, since you have a nice list, you can also block the shit that isn't so obvious but is still screwing around with you. There are lots of click counters and trackers that aren't obvious but are still running on lots of sites. Adblock makes it exceedingly easy to get rid of them.
Furthermore, the pages are usually then collapsed as if the ad never even appeared, and they're usually much easier to read, especially the ones that usually have giant ads in the middle of a block of text. (Common in PC news/review sites, etc.)
It's SO goddamned easy. Futzing with a hosts file is like digging a hole in the backyard to take a crap when there's a toilet sitting inside to just flush the advertisement-laden crap down into. Quicker, easier, BETTER.
Lysander, are you sure there isn't a theme or something that's more agreeable to screenreaders? I'm surprised that you'd be having such problems with Firefox.