phonemh4@social.vivaldi.net to Firefox@lemmy.world · 6 days agoNext time you don't want to update your operating system to do the same things on the Internet you did 5 years ago, #Firefox is your friend.social-cdn.vivaldi.netimagemessage-square16fedilinkarrow-up141arrow-down124file-text
arrow-up117arrow-down1imageNext time you don't want to update your operating system to do the same things on the Internet you did 5 years ago, #Firefox is your friend.social-cdn.vivaldi.netphonemh4@social.vivaldi.net to Firefox@lemmy.world · 6 days agomessage-square16fedilinkfile-text
Next time you don’t want to update your operating system to do the same things on the Internet you did 5 years ago, #Firefox is your friend. @firefox
minus-squaresplendoruranium@infosec.publinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up1·4 days agoThey’re Chromium alright. But what do you mean by it being “obsolete”? Is there some kind of link to a news site reporting this that I missed in your post? And what does this have to do with not updating operating systems?
minus-squarephonemh4@social.vivaldi.netOPlinkfedilinkarrow-up0arrow-down3·4 days ago@splendoruranium An OS becomes obsolete when you can’t update browsers in spite of ‘official’ support (which typically ends earlier). All Chromium-based browsers are made obsolete at the same time. If you can still use Firefox, your old OS still has life.
minus-squaresplendoruranium@infosec.publinkfedilinkEnglisharrow-up1·edit-24 days ago An OS becomes obsolete when you can’t update browsers in spite of ‘official’ support (which typically ends earlier). Surely that only applies to operating systems that are built around browsers, like Chrome OS. Which other OS needs a browser in order to function? All Chromium-based browsers are made obsolete at the same time. How? When? How could a FOSS project with Billions of users possibly ever become obsolete? Is this just some kind of thought experiment?
minus-squareMrMcGasion@lemmy.worldlinkfedilinkarrow-up0·4 days agoI think they mean getting online in an OS that no longer supports (or rather isn’t supported by) the latest version of chromium. That said, going online with an outdated/unsupported OS isn’t a great idea even if Firefox does still support it. And from what I’m seeing the latest Firefox system requirements are very similar to the Chrome requirements too.
They’re Chromium alright. But what do you mean by it being “obsolete”? Is there some kind of link to a news site reporting this that I missed in your post? And what does this have to do with not updating operating systems?
@splendoruranium
An OS becomes obsolete when you can’t update browsers in spite of ‘official’ support (which typically ends earlier).
All Chromium-based browsers are made obsolete at the same time.
If you can still use Firefox, your old OS still has life.
Surely that only applies to operating systems that are built around browsers, like Chrome OS. Which other OS needs a browser in order to function?
How? When? How could a FOSS project with Billions of users possibly ever become obsolete? Is this just some kind of thought experiment?
I think they mean getting online in an OS that no longer supports (or rather isn’t supported by) the latest version of chromium.
That said, going online with an outdated/unsupported OS isn’t a great idea even if Firefox does still support it.
And from what I’m seeing the latest Firefox system requirements are very similar to the Chrome requirements too.