- Firefox 45.0 on linux mint 17.3 update#
- Firefox 45.0 on linux mint 17.3 iso#
- Firefox 45.0 on linux mint 17.3 plus#
- Firefox 45.0 on linux mint 17.3 torrent#
Firefox 45.0 on linux mint 17.3 torrent#
Firefox 45.0 on linux mint 17.3 iso#
Firefox 45.0 on linux mint 17.3 plus#
Plus we share the torrents we are seeding and provide details on last week's releases. In our Questions and Answers column we discuss accessing data stored in hard disk images and share a follow-up to last week's question on creating PDF/A documents. In our News section we talk about changes to the way pfSense is developed, cover Pinguy OS's fix for UEFI issues and talk about how Linux Mint is making their MATE and Xfce desktop editions more flexible. Read our Feature Story this week to find out how the latest version of Neptune performs. We begin this week with a look at Neptune, a Debian-based distribution which strives to function well enough that it will go unnoticed. A good operating system will usually become part of the background, quietly doing its job and staying out of the way. This reflects the fact that we typically notice what our operating systems are doing wrong rather than all the things they are doing right. It has been said, especially in system administration circles, that when someone is doing their job well, you don't even notice they are doing anything.
Of course as you probably know, keep to a modest number of tabs.Welcome to this year's 38th issue of DistroWatch Weekly! You may also look into the suggestion re: intel graphics here. hard-disk - you may also want to see if any of the tips there such as on the "Speed up your Mint!" page may be applicable and of interest. This tip at Pjotr's helpful site regarding 'sessionstore'. You might want to limit its storage/history overriding cache management under firefox preferences > advanced > network and setting it at 0 or other fairly low number.
Under firefox preferences > privacy > location bar, disabling all that might help a bit. You might disable the "pocket" business: enter about:config in the url bar search for and toggle it to false. Under firefox preferences > advanced > data choices, uncheck both options. Under firefox preferences > advanced > general > browsing, try it with all options unchecked - it runs better without hardware accelleration, autoscrolling, smooth scolling, spell check etc, on all the systems I've tried it on. And/or you may want look into what it does and see if you want to make any adjustments accordingly. ck-origin/ (an excellent suggestion from member phb21).
Firefox 45.0 on linux mint 17.3 update#
I installed Chromium and compared to Firefox is a rocket.Īre there any set up or way to update Firefox to a faster version? I would prefer to use Firefox instead of Chromium, i would like to stay away from google as much as i can. I'm running on Linux Mint 17 and Firefox go really slow. Sensors: System Temperatures: cpu: 55.0C mobo: N/A RAID: No RAID devices: /proc/mdstat, md_mod kernel module present Network: Card-1: Broadcom NetLink BCM5787M Gigabit Ethernet PCI ExpressĬard-2: Qualcomm Atheros AR242x / AR542x Wireless Network Adapter (PCI-Express)ĭrives: HDD Total Size: 250.1GB (7.3% used) Sound: Advanced Linux Sound Architecture v: k3.19.0-32-generic GLX Version: 2.1 Mesa 10.5.9 Direct Rendering: YesĪudio: Card Intel 82801H (ICH8 Family) HD Audio Controller Resolution: Renderer: Mesa DRI Intel 965GM x86/MMX/SSE2 Graphics: Card: Intel Mobile GM965/GL960 Integrated Graphics Controller (primary)ĭisplay Server: X.Org 1.17.1 drivers: intel (unloaded: fbdev,vesa) Machine: Mobo: Acer model: Poyang v: V1.45ĬPU: Dual core Intel Pentium Dual T2330 (-MCP-) cache: 1024 KBįlags: (lm nx pae sse sse2 sse3 ssse3) bmips: 6384Ĭlock speeds: max: 1600 MHz 1: 800 MHz 2: 1333 MHz