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  • Moving to Firefox

    After using Brave for the last few years, I recently started getting tired of their in-app ads for crypto wallets, search, etc. I tried Orion for a bit and love their mission, but I’m a tab hoarder and I had a few times where Activity Monitor showed it using 15+ GB of memory with ~100 tabs open.

    I’m a big fan of Arc as well and use it for more exploratory projects where I can use it as a playground for tabs and brainstorming docs — like when planning a trip or looking for visual inspiration. But after opening Firefox for the first time in a while, it felt snappy and…friendly?

    I was a big Mozilla fan in high school, but over time Firefox began to feel slow and bloated. The Firefox Quantum release made it snappier, but I still preferred Brave for its similarity to Chrome. But Mozilla’s recent stances on internet privacy and announcements of interesting products like Firefox Relay and Mozilla.Social led me to give it another try.

    I started adding my normal list of extensions to see how Firefox would work as a daily driver and settled on this list for now:

    Extensions

    For appearance:

    • Sidebery
    • TabSearch

    For performance:

    • Auto tab discard
    • uBlock Origin

    For privacy:

    • Facebook Container

    For productivity:

    • Firefox multi-account container
    • Streetpass for Mastodon

    Sidebery has been the most useful, allowing me to add vertical tabs with fairly high information density. Surprisingly, Firefox allows you to theme almost any part of the window chrome, so I was able to remove the horizontal tabs using some custom css rules in userChrome.css. I think it might be unique among browsers in doing so, even though it’s technically not supported anymore.

    Theming with userChrome.css

    In /Users/{name}/Library/Application\ Support/Firefox/Profiles/4td50vk8.default-release-1675895550421/chrome, add a file called userChrome.css with the following:

    // hides horizontal tab bar
    
    #TabsToolbar {
      display: none;
    }
    
    #sidebar-box #sidebar-header {
      display: none !important;
    }
    

    These guides were particularly useful:

    • https://www.userchrome.org/how-create-userchrome-css.html
    • https://www.userchrome.org/firefox-89-styling-proton-ui.html

    So far so good — sync to mobile works much better than Brave or Orion, and the browser stays snappy even with my ~300 tabs open while I write this:

    → 12:35 AM, Feb 28
  • Flashlights

    Recently purchased the Sofirn BLF SP36

    Research

    • Mainly the Reddit flashlight forum, this thread in particular
    • Budget Light Forum
    → 7:52 PM, Mar 2
  • Moccamaster coffee makers

    Moccamaster

    I’ve been using a Moccamaster for the past two years and love the way it makes coffee. Choosing a model was relatively hard though, since they have multiple options and models. A few friends have asked how I picked a model, so I wanted to share the 3 main decisions you’ll need to make:

    1. Glass vs. stainless steel carafe

    Stainless steel pros:

    • Lower chance of breaking
    • Will keep coffee warmer by itself longer (e.g. taking the carafe to the kitchen table)

    Stainless steel cons:

    • Harder to clean since it’s not dishwasher safe and the mouth is narrower
    • Some people are sensitive to the taste that stainless steel imparts to coffee

    Glass pros

    • Dishwasher safe and easy to clean by hand
    • No aftertaste

    Glass cons

    • All the glass carafe models have a hotplate to keep the coffee warm, which means there are a few more parts that could break over time
    • Easier to break, though it seems quite strong

    2. 10 cup vs. 8 cup

    For anything more than 1 person, would definitely get the 10 cup. The “cups” are European sizes (4oz), and  we go through one 10 cup pot easily. Plus, you can easily make less than 10 cups if you don’t need a full carafe.

    3. Manual drip stop vs auto drip stop

    Manual drip stop has a switch that controls how quickly coffee leaves the brew basket into the carafe. You can close it completely to steep for longer, put it halfway to let it brew more slowly, or open fully to get a weaker cup. We keep ours on half speed all the time and that seems to work really well. Auto dripstop works as soon as you remove the carafe, which is easier but means you don’t have as much control with coffee strength etc.

    Manual dripstop pros

    • Can adjust how strong your coffee is

    Manual dripstop cons

    • Removing carafe midway through brew is harder — need to fully close the brew basket, use carafe, and then reopen the brew basket
    • You can easily forget to reopen brew basket, which will overflow if you don’t. (We’ve gotten close to this a few times when absentmindedly making coffee in the morning).
    • The mechanism is a bit finicky

    There are a few other differences, but basically once you decide on those 3, there’s 1-2 models to choose from.

    Ultimately I chose this model with glass carafe / 10 cup / manual drip stop — in the future, I might choose the automatic drip stop since it’s a bit easier for guests to figure out if they want to make coffee.

    Other resources

    • https://www.beanpoet.com/which-moccamaster-should-i-buy/
    • The water pouring spout has so-so water distribution by default — if you care, there are third party options like this and this that spread the water more evenly
    • Moccamaster recommends using this descaler every few weeks - I use it once a quarter with good results

    +user on reddit who works there

    → 2:06 PM, Feb 28
  • Vacuums

    Recently upgraded my Dyson v7 to a Dyson v11 after the battery ran out. The v11 has a larger bin, stronger suction, and swappable batteries.1

    Research

    • v11 absolute vs torque - only difference is soft roller attachment, which you can buy on eBay separately
    • v11 torque vs animal - animal is missing the LCD screen and auto-detect mode

    1. Swappable batteries were introduced mid year, so not all models include them. Those bought off Dyson all have them, but if you’re buying used you’ll want to look for a red switch on the bottom of the battery indicating it can be removed easily. Other Dysons have replaceable batteries, but they require a screwdriver so you can’t do it intraday. ↩︎

    → 7:58 PM, Feb 17
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