![]() However, you can install the extensions’ crx files using the Chromium Web Store extension (from Github). The Chromium Web Store extension extracts the crx file of the extension from Chrome Web Store and install into UC browser. #Firefox vs ungoogled chromium install#.(5) Generally, if I want or need to leave Windows 7 Professional, I hope to move to some version of Windows Server and just stay away from Windows 10/11. about shopping, weather, travel, news, celebrities, etc. ![]() (4) I'm guessing that Windows Server will have less of the intrusive, unrequested popups, suggestions, recommendations, etc. (3) I am guessing that with Windows Server I can still run software that has long, commonly run on Windows, e.g., KEdit, Firefox, Rexx, some IBM code in Fortran for the classic applied math of linear programming, a Fortran compiler, Adobe's Acrobat PDF reader, Knuth's TeX mathematical word processing software. (2) My understanding is that with Windows Server, can turn off the automatic updates. What is a widget? Maybe I use them nearly hourly, but I don't know just what they are, what the definition is. (1) Simple question: This thread has many mentions of a widget. I'm considering plugging together a desktop computer for a Web server, with, say, some 16 core AMD processor, solid state memory for much of the file system, e.g., the SQL part, running some version of Windows Server 2019. That system has the 100,000 lines of code for my Web site I'm eager to get on-line. From a move, I have a Windows 7 Professional system in a box and am eager to get it running. ![]() I have some questions.īackground: At present I'm a heavy user of Windows 10 Home Edition, Firefox, KEdit, Rexx, etc. There is a LOT of discussion here about the Microsoft Web browser Edge and Windows 10/11. I've read recently that next it will try to integrate a crypto wallet into the Edge. But OMG! Microsoft with every update ruins the experience even more and tries to shovel an even more irrelevant introduction to other services that have nothing to do with a browser. I used to love the Edge and switched everything to it from Chrome. Step 2: Disable in the browser's Settings in the "System and performance" section "Startup boost" for it to not launch the browser in advance without the flag. "C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft\Edge\Application\msedge.exe" -profile-directory=Default -disable-features=msEdgeSidebarV2 Step 1: Add in the properties of the shortcut icon that launches the Edge browser additional flag: It's too big and really provides no real value except offering users to sign up for a waiting list. This huge blue Bing icon in the toolbar near the address bar is really abusive. Whether it will be sustainable money is the question, but often one that isn't asked. It can be really hard to pass up what seems like free money and what seems to be working. Maybe your profits are increasing, but are you doing long-term damage to your product and brand that will see bad long-term effects? "We've found that we can increase ad revenue by adding 7 more ads to the page." Then a few years later customers have left. It's why I'm sometimes skeptical about companies trying to optimize things too much. Microsoft could just have Edge feed Bing traffic and make money off ads on Bing - but they want more! Apple makes plenty of money from Safari while making sure Safari keeps that space as "a utility that end users can trust to have their back and preserve their privacy in as many circumstances as possible." The issue is that Microsoft is looking for all the edge cases to milk marginal profits out of. The issue isn't that Microsoft wants to make money from Edge. This is an increase over the roughly $10 billion Google paid last year for the exclusivity." "Sacconaghi estimates that Google could be paying nearly $15 billion in 2021 for default placement. Their deal for Google to be the default search engine makes them a ton of money. I understand what the author is getting at, but Apple does make a lot of money off Safari. ![]() Apple doesn’t try to make revenue from Safari because they don’t need to. Partly I’m hoping that somebody at Microsoft will wake up to the unrealised potential of Edge and start treating it like Safari: a utility that end users can trust to have their back and preserve their privacy in as many circumstances as possible.
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