Karlston Posted July 3, 2019 Share Posted July 3, 2019 Pale Moon 28.6.0 major update released The Pale Moon development team released Pale Moon 28.6.0 to the public on July 2, 2019. The new version of the web browser is a major development update that focuses on "under-the-hood improvements and bugfixes, code cleanup, and performance" according to the release notes. The new Pale Moon version is available via the browser's integrated updating system already. Pale Moon users can run a manual check for updates with a click on Pale Moon > Help > Check for Updates. The browser should pick up the new version during the check so that it can be installed. Pale Moon 28.6.0 is also available on the official project website. Tip: Check out our Pale Moon Tweaks guide here. Pale Moon 28.6.0 Most changes in Pale Moon 28.6.0 are under-the-hood changes; users should not expect a huge number of new features but the changes made in the release improve the experience in several ways. Pale Moon 28.6.0 features support for new ECMAScript features that are part of ES2019, the next version of JavaScript and support for gzip compressed SVG in Opentype fonts. One change improves the encryption strength of the browser's master password if set. The team changed NSS to "a custom version" to improve the encryption strength. Users who have set a master password already need to change the master password so that the stronger encryption is used. It is possible to set the same master password in the process. The development team notes that the encryption may take some time to complete when set up depending on the number of stored passwords and the performance of the computer, and that it is not backwards compatible. In other words: the password store cannot be accessed anymore using older Pale Moon versions once the switch has been made. Several tweaks and fixes were made to improve the performance of the browser or certain operations. Improvements were made to the DOM and the parser, and fixes were implemented to address performance issues, e.g. on sites with complex event regions or display lists. Several components, some Telemetry related, were removed in the new Pale Moon version. The web browser includes several fixes for issues, e.g. an issue that prevented the printing of certain web pages or tab previews on the taskbar. Closing Words Pale Moon is a popular web browser, especially among former Firefox users who wanted to keep on using browser extensions that Firefox dropped support for when version 57 of the browser was released. Source: Pale Moon 28.6.0 major update released (gHacks - Martin Brinkmann) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
danielson Posted July 4, 2019 Share Posted July 4, 2019 Had discarded Palemoon from my vision for quite a while now but this latest version is really nice! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mp68terr Posted July 4, 2019 Share Posted July 4, 2019 3 hours ago, danielson said: Had discarded Palemoon from my vision for quite a while... Why did you discard it? Privacy reasons? Security? Using the combo vivaldi/palemoon here. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
danielson Posted July 4, 2019 Share Posted July 4, 2019 A bit like Vivaldi and other derivatives, there are some things on the web that it could not handle. But this latest rendition is showing greater stability. Presently have some quirks with extensions not in its repo that work but might be impossible to make 100% compatible. Also, it's always a bit of a tug of war when you want to sync with an app on tablet (Android) and some like Vivaldi or Palemoon aren't there yet. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
danielson Posted July 5, 2019 Share Posted July 5, 2019 It's hard to recall all the quirks experienced previously with Palemoon and if my memory serves me well, ( with Vivaldi too), some webpages wouldn't come in, problems with streaming video content etc. What keeps me intrigued with Palemoon as well as Waterfox (among other things), is the ongoing effort to improve and especially with keeping a few extensions that i cherished so much with Firefox prior to Quantum and Australis shenanigans. I dearly missed FEBE extension - 'cause, even if Firefox sync is pretty well stable now, i always like an easy alternative 1,2,3 backup in case something ever did happen and FEBE filled that need. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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