by leonry on 2/20/25, 7:46 PM with 57 comments
by spudlyo on 2/20/25, 8:11 PM
by lynx97 on 2/20/25, 8:44 PM
by 2mlWQbCK on 2/20/25, 8:42 PM
by aadhavans on 2/20/25, 8:08 PM
I'd never thought about it like that, but it's a nice side-effect. You don't have to worry about obtrusive JS, if your browser doesn't know what JS is. :D
by blacksmith_tb on 2/20/25, 10:36 PM
by sylware on 2/21/25, 1:27 AM
And all the other dominant online services which broke noscript/basic (x)html to the benefit of the absurdely and grotesquely massive and complex (including their compiler) whatng web engines? This did shut the door definitely in the face of all citizen/state sponsored/small commercial alternatives which [could] have been super stable in time (including their SDK).
This is not "evolution" or "innovation", this is a scam and planned obsolescence at accute levels.
You could perfectly stream a video with a dash/HLS URL transfered to a media player (ads can be text on the web page and they can include some directly into the video stream).
by wrycoder on 2/20/25, 8:42 PM
by ylee on 2/20/25, 8:32 PM
I have elinks as a default `tmux` pseudoterminal. I don't use it often, but it's always there.
My emacs setup uses w3m as the parser for HTML mail in VM, my email client. It works really well. <https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39793342>
by rsync on 2/20/25, 9:37 PM
"You can say goodbye to uBlock Origin, which is now virtually useless with default settings anyway."
Are they referring to difficulties running uBO on chrome or ... that uBO is losing the arms race against advertising infra generally ?
by terminaltrove on 2/20/25, 10:01 PM
https://terminaltrove.com/w3m/
https://terminaltrove.com/links/
https://terminaltrove.com/reader/
https://terminaltrove.com/elinks/
We are so glad that these tools exist for the terminal, we even still use w3m and lynx from time to time.
https://terminaltrove.com/lynx/
If you do use the terminal for your browsing I recommend ddgr as it integrates with all of the above browsers, except reader.
by w4rh4wk5 on 2/20/25, 8:31 PM
by lizknope on 2/20/25, 10:27 PM
I recently tried Usenet for the first time in 20 years. I installed slrn the text based newsreader I used in the 1990's. It has very useful color support. I wish Usenet was more active instead of 90% spam. Having threads go for years and being able to go to the next post by hitting "n" instead of clicking around is a lot quicker.
by dredmorbius on 2/21/25, 6:17 AM
That seems to be a wrapper on DuckDuckGo, though it's helpful to know that DDG has its own lite-mode interface which plays quite well with the terminal.
As noted in an earlier comment I invoke ddg search with a shell alias:
ddg ()
{
w3m "https://duckduckgo.com/lite?q=$*&kd=-1"
}
The lite page itself is <https://duckduckgo.com/lite>.Last I'd tried using Google via w3m I found it blocking me entirely, though TBF I've not even tried it in months if not years.
by rasengan0 on 2/21/25, 3:01 AM
by nickdothutton on 2/21/25, 1:12 PM
by InMice on 2/20/25, 9:43 PM
by AdmiralAsshat on 2/20/25, 10:03 PM
Not lynx's fault, of course. But memories are memories.
by alkh on 2/21/25, 7:17 PM
by FergusArgyll on 2/20/25, 10:03 PM
by toprerules on 2/20/25, 9:40 PM
by xenodium on 2/20/25, 10:34 PM
by dredmorbius on 2/21/25, 6:12 AM
DuckDuckGo, online dictionaries or etymologies, wikipedia, weather, and news are among the quick look-ups I use. Being able to do all of that in shell / from terminal, have it in my shell history, and be able to pipe output or save to file are all wins in my book.
by jmclnx on 2/20/25, 9:36 PM
It also supports gopher and I heard rumors it will add Gemini (protocol, the real Gemini). If so, that would be awesome.