Of course, as the developer mentions, your mileage may vary. Under that seemingly copy-cat façade lurks a tweaked Gecko engine that, according to the author’s website, will render pages up to 30% percent faster than regular Firefox.
When you install and run Pale Moon for the first time, the user interface strongly resembles that of regular Firefox, with the only superficial difference being a blue-centered theme for the UI. In such an event, your only recourse is the standard version of Firefox, albeit suffering any potential optimizations that could make your browsing experience, faster, more powerful and elegant. If you are still stuck on a pokey Pentium III or other SSE-only x86 processor, Pale Moon will not run and that’s a sign that you are due for a hardware upgrade. Pale Moon is developed to take advantage of newer processors in a very significant manner. For example, where Waterfox caters solely to 64-bit operating systems, Pale Moon provides optimized builds for both 32-bit and 64-bit versions of Windows as well as axing unnecessary extras, such as accessibility and parental control capabilities. Today, we look at competing project called Pale Moon, which is another Firefox derivative.Īlthough the goals and objectives of Pale Moon are quite similar to an offshoot like Waterfox, developer priorities for features beyond core functionality are different. Pale Moonįor instance, a browser I reviewed in April of 2012 called Waterfox is a special 64-bit Windows optimized build of Firefox which is said to improve upon performance and efficiency. On a higher level, however, there are projects that are considered offshoots of open source mainline browsers like Firefox and Chrome that apply their own twists and special sauce, all the while keeping a major bulk of the engine underneath mostly the same. We have browser choices in addition to the standard fare of Firefox, Opera, Internet Explorer, and Chrome. With the recent news about Google’s switch to the Blink engine and Mozilla experimenting with a multi-core optimized Firefox engine called Servo, there is quite a bit of change on the horizon for under-the-hood technologies that power the browsers we love. Matt Nawrocki takes a look at an optimized web browser that may not be as optimized as advertised.
Download Pale Moon for Linux release binaries Another choice is to download pre-compiled binaries and load these into your $PATH, untested by me.Review: Pale Moon web browser for Windows.Download Pale Moon for Linux Installer A linux 'installer' is available as well, untested by me.Blessing for the PPA from the Developers There was a period of instability with the Pale Moon packages from this PPA but resolved as of version 27.1.Then take this new kid on the block (comparatively!) for a test run:
Sudo apt-get update & sudo apt-get install palemoon stevenpusser/x$(lsb_release -sir | paste -sd_)/ /" | sudo tee /etc/apt//home:stevenpusser.list & \ The browser Pale Moon as yet does not exist in the Bionic Beaver repositories but there is a dependable PPA available that has the nod of approval of the Pale Moon developers.Īdd the PPA and install Pale Moon with the following one liner: echo "deb :\