![]() ![]() I haven't tried AdBlockPlus but I do use NoScript ( ) which is a Javascript "whitelist" filter that prevents Javascript from running from any site at anytime unless you give it specific permission to do so either on a permanent/persistent basis, or on a temporary session basis. They don't really enforce much privacy and are close to ineffective since search giants like Google have 50+ different ways of identifying your computer and therefore keeping track of your browsing histories across multiple sites. "Privacy protectors" like Ghostery and Abine only do things like delete cookies after sessions and ask search engines to "play nice". Now, whenever you type keyword searches on the URL address bar, it'll send the query to DuckDuckGo instead of Google. On the value column of the keyword.URL row type or paste.A long list of parameters comes up with a search bar on top.Click through all the warnings, like "Here be dragons!".Type about:config in the URL address bar.when you type searches directly into the URL address bar, you can do this: I'll see where we go with Chromium or Iron (or Chrome if we really have to as long as we can move on from IE8.) If I can go someway to stopping our user's becoming indentured serfs then all the better.Īnyone who's interested in changing their default search provider, i.e. That's a good start for me but there's no way I'd try and sell all that lot to our Technical unit. It'll be interesting to see what adblock and ghostery miss out. I've also ditched Gmail for, Google search for and will be installing on my smartphone in the near future. I'll have another look at Tor. Portable Firefox will also run off a network drive whereas chromium browsers wont or will but reports unresponsive script errors.įor privacy I use firefox with and extensions. It doesn't automatically use the networks proxy like chromium based browsers (which makes them a good candidate for network rollout) and allows me more flexibility on network logins - good for testing. This entry was tagged with adobe, chrome, flash, h264, mac, os x, software by Mahmoud Al-Qudsi.I'm sticking with portable firefox for myself ) ![]() ![]() Turn on Chrome, and verify that everything works! Browse to chrome://plugins and verify that you see this there: On the desktop, rename “Flash ugin” to “Flash Player Plugin for ugin” and then move both of these files to the first Finder window you opened, which should still be at the “Internet Plug-Ins” subfolder of the Google Chrome package. Then copy and paste “Flash ugin” and “flashplayer.xpt” to the Desktop. Open a new Finder window and browse to /Library/Internet Plug-Ins/ Step 3: Install the Latest Flash Player Plugin.Continue to Google Chrome amework/Internet Plug-Ins/Īnd delete “Flash Player Plugin for ugin” Browse to the Google Chrome application in the Applications folder, right-click it, and choose “Show Package Contents” Proceed to browse to Contents/Versions/Īnd then open the latest version number available. Shut down Chrome (which means, save a copy of this guide to the disk, first!), and open Finder. Step 2: Delete Chrome’s Existing Plugin.Download it, mount the DMG, and run the installer. If the link breaks in the future, you can probably find the latest copy here, instead. Step 1: Download and install Flash Player 10.2Ĭlick here to begin the download of Flash Player 10.2 beta.These steps below will guide you through the process of using Flash Player 10.2 with Google Chrome on OS X: However, for those of us that use Chrome, there is no way to updated to the latest 10.2 beta of Flash Chrome uses its own copy of Flash that comes built-in and cannot be externally updated. Recently (late November), Adobe finally got around to releasing an update to Flash Player for OS X that comes with the long-awaited hardware-based rendering of H.264-encoded videos. ![]()
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