Wacky Wolf on the Web. Occasionally NSFW. Frequently flat. Has goofy ahh kinks. Also Bisexual :flag_bi:

Likes Computers, IoT, Transformation (Particularly inanimate), Flattening, Inflation, and other toony tropes. Also Therian ΘΔ, and sometimes I scream and complain about @mozilla

⚠️WARNING⚠️

Don’t expect to look at cartoons the same way again after seeing my posts. Minors are **STRONGLY** advised to leave

#furry #toon #toonfur #computer #wolf

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Joined 11 months ago
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Cake day: December 30th, 2023

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  • @[email protected] Frankly, I would suggest Vivaldi because it feels like it’s one of the few browsers that’s not a lost cause anymore. It’s not mismanaged like Firefox (with Mozilla focusing it’s time on other shiny things), not clinging onto you like Microsoft Edge (nagging you to use it), not locked in like Safari (Which is only really suitable on Apple devices), not defying it’s promises like Brave (not nearly as private as people claim), nor mundane like Google Chrome (looks good, but that’s about it. Other than that it’s just taking your data for little in return).

    It’s one of the few browsers anymore being designed by people that actually understand what it’s audience wants. Both in terms of expectations of its development team, and the browser itself, without trying to reinvent the wheel either. The software itself should set the standard for how software should be designed, even if not copy it one-on-one. At least creating something modular that can be molded by it’s users.

    Some major things in particular that I like:

    • Featureset focuses on everything outside the webpage (no shopping tools, review tools, ai tools, anything that injects into a page that would be better off as a web extension)
    • Full cross-device experience
    • Overall builds upon the concepts of how web browsers were initially built in a modern fashion
    • Builds upon the Chromium base, so most of the stuff there is
    • Has a nice looking UI