- Inoreader
- Bitwarden
- uBlock
- Sponsorblock
- Dark Reader
- Font Changer
- Stylus
- Markdownload - web clipper
- Lasttab (Alt_Z back to last tab) A. Violentmonkey B. webcompat.com reporter C. Wikiwand D. YouTube Redux
TTIME (abbr - not alias)
abbr -a -- ttime date\ \'+It\ is\ \%-H\ \%M\ and\ \%S\ seconds\'\|espeak\ \>/dev/null\ 2\>/dev/null # imported from a universal variable, see `help abbr`
Generic shortcuts - F6
and Ctrl+L
both get the URL selected.
Ctrl+C
can copy - switch window and paste.
Alternatively, if the windows are both open you can drag the Padlock icon (certainly with Firefox) to your field.
Well yes…
Ctrl+L
then Ctrl+C
gets it.
So you’ve all see videos from the likes of Emkay and Updoot Studios or the like right?
No. Never.
That’s certainly a huge improvement IMO
Nobody can help because nobody knows what software you’re running.
To check Firefox, you go to about:profiles and create/test a new one.
To fix your Operating System you go to your Operating System FORUM and put in a well formatted request for assistance.
Some Firefox people are also over at https://fedia.io/m/firefox so go try there.
FYI: I opened your link and it plays perfectly in Firefox.
That’s strange - though I don’t use Windows. Generally I upload images to imagr to paste links, but images generally paste straight from the clipboard…
I always found most of Opera’s extras to be adding stuff that doesn’t really need adding… maybe look at alternative clipboard managers or something (I use CopyQ).
I was excited when I bought an Amiga 500, and ever since then the main thing I noticed is that the EXCITEMENT of getting a computer was always over-ruled by my ability to exploit it’s powers and use it.
So my perspective is that all computers and operating systems SUCK. But some suck less than others…
So using Manjaro KDE, it sucks less because it’s very simple and easy for me to install whatever I like - having AUR available, being able to search with pamac to include repos, AUR and Flatpak (even snap if I was that desperate).
KDE also gives you super powers to
fuck upmodify your desktop experience and shortcuts.It’s been good to me for 6 years now. After going Ubuntu>Mint I was excited to leave Debian and try something else, I never made it to the Redhat camp (always interested to try Fedora) and hopefully will never feel the need.
So yes, what I like MOST is - it mostly just works. And when it fails, the forum is awesome.