![]() Bear in mind /e/ isn't just a custom ROM, it's also marketed with their own devices under the Murena brand (e.g., Fairphones and some refurbished Samsungs, check ). After all, they're trying to be on par with Google's platform out-of-the-box functionality, while steering clear of their privacy damaging practices. I think that /e/ is far from perfect but I also think that it isn't fair to judge it too harshly for its choice of bundled apps (which one can easily disable through ADB, BTW.). And one of the reasons for the choice of the particular brand and model of the latter was precisely its being /e/ supported. I have e.foundation's /e/ ( epsilon?) installed in one of my devices (an old phone I use as a Bluetooth mediaplayer), Lineage OS in my tablet and LOS-based Ressurection Remix OS in my daily driver phone. Would rather just use LineageOS, which /e/ is derived from and receives faster updates. They bundle a lot of apps that I'll never use myself. ![]() What about Ungoogled Android? There are a few efforts out there on this front, but one in particular that looks like it's coming along well is /E/OS: There is a project with this specific name but I'm not linking to it as the program is a mostly empty fork and not a real project.įreakazoid wrote: ↑I'm not a fan of /e/. Site note: in case this ever gets it's own entry, I think first mention belongs to freakazoid. EDIT: Freakazoid covered this in a post below. ![]() Some are likely to break but with the focus on maintaining standard Chrome behavior, it's also possible there won't be any issues. mium.shtml (using Softpedia because the home page has a source-only release section)Īdd-on compatibility: No idea. There's just too much in the Chromium software that wasn't written with portability in mind.ĭownload. While they do make a portable version available, I'm not optimistic that it actually keeps all settings saved locally. Which was (I believe) the whole point of the open source concept in the first place. This is especially amusing because there's a whole section on different browser tweaks used by other neighboring open source projects that they've adopted either partially or as a whole. Unlike a lot of browsers right now (Chrome, Edge, Opera, Vivaldi, etc.), it's fully open source.
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