The 64-bit portables will continue to auto-update as normal these 32-bitzers will have to be manually built, as & when Steve produces them, since the 'Check for Updates' menu item is no longer present. Perhaps someone else can fix the libstdc++.so.6 'issue'. I've no idea what Steve uses to build these. Unfortunately, this won't run in older Puppies due to the need for a newer libstdc++.so.6 'Stretch' is, so far, the only one I've tested it under. Posting from it now, in DPup Stretch 7.5. You'll find it in the usual location in post #1, but this is one layer deeper, in the directory marked "Portables/32-bit/PaleMoon+". Moonchild Productions are no longer producing 32-bit Linux binaries, but Steve has been building these for quite a while.Īll credits to Steve, and here is a 'portable' 32-bit build of PaleMoon 28.17.0 for y'all. over at OpenSuse, this is Steve Pusser's build of the current Pale Moon 28.17.0 release. With thanks to peebee for unearthing this one:. You can even run this from a flash drive if you feel so inclined, for the ultimate in portability. So long as you always start it via the 'LAUNCH' script, it will create, and use, its own 'internal' profile every time. Click to enter, click 'LAUNCH' to fire it up. Place the resulting PaleMoon-portable directory wherever you want, though preferably outside the 'save'.
The 64-bit will auto-update via the built-in updater, and is the GTK2 build, rather than the GTK3.hopefully making it compatible with more Puppies.ģ2-bit, SSE-only builds (v28.17.0, v29.1.0 & the current v29.4.1, all with glibc-2.28 'tweak'):. Here are up-to-date, current packages of v29.4.6. I've 'portabilized' these one along with an updated, Debian Buster-based glibc - 2.28 - using watchdog's original 'tweak' trick.
So we're still able to find 32-bit stuff to work with ATM.and now THREE SSE-only builds, courtesy of one of our new members, Fenyo. There are, however, a handful of "approved" 3rd-party 32-bit builds which are endorsed by the head of the project.Moonchild himself. 100% Firefox sourced: As safe as the browser that has seen years of development.To keep this thread up-to-date, potential users need to be aware that Pale Moon, like so many open-source projects, has now dropped 32-bit builds and officially gone 64-bit only.In short, if you need accessibility features or parental controls, then please visit the firefox homepage and get the official, non-optimized build. Please see the page with technical details to learn exactly what the browser supports, and what it doesn't support. A few, carefully selected, features have been disabled that are not in high demand, and that do not interfere with the way web pages are displayed or function all to maximize speed and efficiency of the browser. This means that this browser, however extremely close to Firefox, does not have all the functions that Firefox has.
Of course, getting a faster browser is not just about optimizing the compilation process (building a program from its source code), but also about carefully choosing features and how to choose the best setup. Make sure to get the most speed out of your browser!
That needs to change! So, here is the Pale Moon project: Custom-built and optimized Firefox browsers for Windows Operating Systems. Why settle for a basic build of your Firefox browser on Windows Operating Systems when you can have one that performs 25% faster? Mozilla does not provide optimized browser packages for Windows, while many Linux ("from scratch") users get the advantage of a browser built specifically for their system.
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