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Lenovo stopped the whitelusting with the 50 Models. I tried two internal wifi m2 ngff cards that are not listed as compatible in my x260 and both were working.



Lots of browsers are mentioned in this thread, before clicking each one it might be nice to know a few things like whether it's open source and how development is sustained.


In a discussion of privacy preserving browsers, open source can be assumed. The only task is to out those that are not for some reason.

Here is the about page:

* https://iridiumbrowser.de/about


It's Chromium without Google integration, too.


I don't see a reason to trust anything without a track record when it comes to a browser.


It seems to be a similar project. I encountered it as one of the best browsers currently running on OpenBSD. In particular it doesn't slowly leak memory over a period of weeks and get really slow like Firefox does on that platform[1].

[1] In fairness, Firefox slowly leaks memory on Linux as well, but it never gets entirely unusable, just mostly.


It is not. If their customers are in the EU they have to to comply.


I was specific. If I don't do business in the EU, it doesn't matter. I don't really care where my customers are but if they pay in the US, GDPR is not relevant to me.

I get that everyone is super excited about GDPR, but sorry to say most websites can safely ignore it.


What authority would make them comply?


...which is not compliant. "Opt out everywhere" has to be the default when you click accept.

But for version 2 of GDPR I'd like to see something like: No landing pages. Content must be served on the first request. And no Captchas for Tor users.


Look here at web interfaces and news... there are quite a few gems: http://gopher.floodgap.com/gopher/gw?gopher://bitreich.org:7...


Making gopher even faster is probably a challenge worth a talk :)


Wow, there is a whole gopher community again! That's amazing!


Clickbait title. The actual title is "Tips to improve your online marketing campaign."


I remember that they bloated up their client so much with menu bars, icons and later ads that it was not snappy anymore and required a lot of memory. So people where looking for alternatives.


This didn't happen in the last years. I doubt it will happen at all. I think they're more interested in the algorithms to reuse them in Google Apps the one or the other way.


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