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An interactive map of FLock Cams

https://deflock.org/map#map=5/37.125286/-96.284180
172•anjel•1h ago•24 comments

MacBook Neo

https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2026/03/say-hello-to-macbook-neo/
1122•dm•5h ago•1456 comments

Making Firefox's right-click not suck with about:config

https://joshua.hu/firefox-making-right-click-not-suck
129•mmsc•2h ago•80 comments

Something is afoot in the land of Qwen

https://simonwillison.net/2026/Mar/4/qwen/
321•simonw•4h ago•154 comments

Father claims Google's AI product fuelled son's delusional spiral

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/czx44p99457o
21•tartoran•27m ago•1 comments

Nobody Gets Promoted for Simplicity

https://terriblesoftware.org/2026/03/03/nobody-gets-promoted-for-simplicity/
696•aamederen•8h ago•403 comments

NanoGPT Slowrun: Language Modeling with Limited Data, Infinite Compute

https://qlabs.sh/slowrun
53•sdpmas•2h ago•7 comments

Moss is a pixel canvas where every brush is a tiny program

https://www.moss.town/
76•smusamashah•9h ago•8 comments

Data Has Weight but Only on SSDs

https://cubiclenate.com/2026/03/04/data-has-weight-but-only-on-ssds-blathering/
21•LorenDB•1h ago•8 comments

“It turns out” (2010)

https://jsomers.net/blog/it-turns-out
181•Munksgaard•5h ago•64 comments

Roboflow (YC S20) Is Hiring a Security Engineer for AI Infra

https://roboflow.com/careers
1•yeldarb•2h ago

Who Writes the Bugs? A Deeper Look at 125,000 Kernel Vulnerabilities

https://pebblebed.com/blog/kernel-bugs-part2
43•MBCook•2h ago•8 comments

Faster C software with Dynamic Feature Detection

https://gist.github.com/jjl/d998164191af59a594500687a679b98d
21•todsacerdoti•1h ago•2 comments

Raspberry Pi Pico as AM Radio Transmitter

https://www.pesfandiar.com/blog/2026/02/28/pico-am-radio-transmitter
35•pesfandiar•3d ago•16 comments

Glaze by Raycast

https://www.glazeapp.com/
151•romac•6h ago•92 comments

Qwen3.5 Fine-Tuning Guide – Unsloth Documentation

https://unsloth.ai/docs/models/qwen3.5/fine-tune
180•bilsbie•8h ago•48 comments

Libre Solar – Open Hardware for Renewable Energy

https://libre.solar
147•evolve2k•3d ago•45 comments

My Favorite 39C3 Talks

https://asindu.xyz/my-favorite-39c3-talks/
10•max_•3d ago•2 comments

MyFirst Kids Watch Hacked. Access to Camera and Microphone

https://www.kth.se/en/om/nyheter/centrala-nyheter/kth-studenten-hackade-klocka-for-barn-1.1461249
78•jidoka•7h ago•21 comments

Agentic Engineering Patterns

https://simonwillison.net/guides/agentic-engineering-patterns/
438•r4um•15h ago•239 comments

The Space Race's Forgotten Theme Park

https://daily.jstor.org/the-space-races-forgotten-theme-park/
8•anarbadalov•2h ago•0 comments

Google ends its 30 percent app store fee and welcomes third-party app stores

https://www.engadget.com/apps/google-ends-its-30-percent-app-store-fee-and-welcomes-third-party-a...
18•_____k•34m ago•3 comments

RFC 9849. TLS Encrypted Client Hello

https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc9849.html
242•P_qRs•12h ago•119 comments

Government grant-funded research should not be published in for-profit journals

https://www.experimental-history.com/p/the-one-science-reform-we-can-all
285•sito42•5h ago•125 comments

TikTok will not introduce end-to-end encryption, saying it makes users less safe

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cly2m5e5ke4o
365•1659447091•18h ago•357 comments

Emails to Outlook.com rejected due to a fault or overzealous blocking rules

https://www.theregister.com/2026/03/04/users_fume_at_outlookcom_email/
102•Bender•8h ago•67 comments

The 1,700-year-old megastructure history almost forgot

https://www.cnn.com/2026/02/28/travel/travel-news-jetavanaramaya-ephesus
15•simonebrunozzi•2d ago•2 comments

Motorola GrapheneOS devices will be bootloader unlockable/relockable

https://grapheneos.social/@GrapheneOS/116160393783585567
1157•pabs3•19h ago•472 comments

RE#: how we built the fastest regex engine in F#

https://iev.ee/blog/resharp-how-we-built-the-fastest-regex-in-fsharp/
171•exceptione•3d ago•60 comments

A CPU that runs entirely on GPU

https://github.com/robertcprice/nCPU
225•cypres•15h ago•110 comments
Open in hackernews

Making Firefox's right-click not suck with about:config

https://joshua.hu/firefox-making-right-click-not-suck
129•mmsc•2h ago

Comments

wvenable•1h ago
> Why do all of the above have ...? No clue.

The "..." convention is used when menu options open a dialog box rather than just immediately doing the action.

paulddraper•1h ago
+1 This has been true for, what, 30 years?
plorkyeran•1h ago
At least 40 years, since it was already present in Windows 1.0 (see https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S-SuAaYDZIk for an example).
marssaxman•1h ago
The original Macintosh software also did this, back in 1984.

From the Apple Human Interface Guidelines, published in 1986: "The application dims an item when the user can't choose it. If the user moves the pointer over a dimmed item, that item isn't highlighted."

There may well have been prior art, but that's as far back as my knowledge goes.

TonyTrapp•1h ago
Specifically, it means that more information is required to complete the task (e.g. requesting the filename for saving a file). If the action is literally about opening that dialog (e.g. something like "Show Properties"), the ellipsis is not needed.
ndespres•1h ago
Some of these complaints feel like they aren’t specific to Firefox at all, but are UI conventions that used to be ubiquitous and no longer are, much to the chagrin of those of us of a certain age.

He also rails against menu items that are greyed out and unusable, where to me that’s a very useful indicator that the action isn’t available here but that I’m looking in the right place.

When I want to click a menu item and find it greyed out, that tells me something. But when I want to click a menu item and it’s not there at all, I’m confused. Did a developer move it somewhere else? Did the name of the action change? Am I losing my touch?

vanschelven•1h ago
Indeed both the "..." and "disabling over removing" were in the windows 95 UI manual
jrmg•41m ago
Also macOS in its various guises, for decades.
pdntspa•30m ago
I have a lot of questions about the person who wrote that blog post, in that it seems to be a quick hot take without any digging into the reasons why things are the way are

Blog first, ask questions later? It's like c'mon man, have at least a little bit of curiosity...

darkwater•9m ago
No idea about author's exact age but I would bet he was born around Y2K (according to his CV) and, well, it's IMO a testament that usability is based on habits, culture and conventions, and it's not a universal truth.
lucianbr•1h ago
This particular line serves only to highlight the author's limited knowledge. I wonder what they meant by it.

Also greyed out options have a point, they only seem "fucking useless" if you don't know it.

mmsc•55m ago
You're right, I didn't know about what that "..." meant. It's kind of obvious what I meant though: "I don't know why all of these have ..." I've added that information to the post.

The greyed out options have no point because 99.99% of the links I click are already clean. Like so many of the other privacy enhancing options, just provide an option to "clean links automatically."

plorkyeran•16m ago
Link "cleaning" will sometimes just break a link entirely since it's a heuristic-based thing that removes query parameters that appear to be nonfunctional tracking parameters. Doing it by default would be setting up users for the occasional very bad experience.
CamperBob2•26m ago
The article's author doesn't appear to be particularly tech-literate. I flagged the post on the grounds that it doesn't meet HN standards in general.
varun_ch•1h ago
It is fantastic that Firefox gives us the benefit of choice though. Maybe Chrome or whatever has better UX taste out of the box, but good luck changing anything if you disagree.

I wrote a blog post about how I customized Firefox exactly to what I wanted https://varun.ch/posts/firefox/ including a minimal UI, monospaced font, sidebar, etc etc. userChrome.css is a great feature and it’s amazing that it’s just exposed to the user.

bigthymer•1h ago
Personally, I think the Firefox browser right-click options are one of the more useful right-click menus. The one on the Apple OS is a better example of excessive and worthless.
peterspath•1h ago
I really miss the look up, translate, and search with... options in Firefox I have anywhere else when I right click on a selected word.
tcfhgj•1h ago
interestingly, I have these options in Firefox
OkayPhysicist•18m ago
I think the above comment meant that he misses those Firefox options when he uses other applications.
aftbit•1h ago
Odd complaint but interesting list of about:config options! I must be in the tiny minority that has actually _used_ all of these right-click menu items at one time or another.
yreg•1h ago
I mean "Set as Desktop background" seems to definitely be an overkill to have on a speed dial.

Unfortunately that one is not removable through about:config.

debugnik•1h ago
That one gets used a lot when someone leaves their laptop unlocked at college.
dwoldrich•1h ago
Apple famously abandoned per-window menus per Fitt's law[1]. Wiki[2] says:

> Apple experiments in GUI design for the Lisa project initially used multiple menu bars anchored to the bottom of windows, but this was quickly dropped in favor of the current arrangement, as it proved slower to use (in accordance with Fitts's law). The idea of separate menus in each window or document was later implemented in Windows and is the default approach in most Linux desktop environments.

I recall hearing a quote that said Jobs called the menu the ultimate discoverability tool in the designer's arsenal, but I couldn't find the quote.

I am thankful for the menu junk drawer in Firefox. Better to give me everything I can discover in a menu rather than make a zillion fugly buttons and cluttering up the chrome. Although, anything that isn't frequently used by users should at least go under a few submenus to echo OP's criticisms. If Copy Clean Link is the "right" thing to do for users, then make "Copy Raw Link" a sub-menu item.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fitts%27s_law [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Menu_bar

archerx•1h ago
I think Firefox’s “shift + right click” to bypass context menu blocking should be adopted by all browsers.
ghrl•1h ago
Yeah, it's one of those features where after getting used to it you just can't understand why not every browser has it. I remember trying to copy an image from OneNote and conveniently in the custom content menu there is a button to copy the image. The only thing it does however is tell you it doesn't work and to use Cmd+C instead, which doesn't work either. So Shift + Right Click saves the day again.
yreg•1h ago
The opening rant is quite fun to read. It's nice that it's possible to clean up the context menu in the config.
agwa•1h ago
In an alternative timeline, Firefox makes their context menu really short and someone writes a blog post ranting about how it deprives functionality from power users.

In fact, I've read several such rants about Firefox removing functionality from other parts of their UI.

It's sure hard to make everyone happy.

mantra2•1h ago
You can please some of the people, some of the time.
NoboruWataya•1h ago
My first thought reading this was "it's amazing what some people can get angry about".
heraldgeezer•1h ago
Yes, I for one love all the options... dont hide menus from me, I have a big screen.
behringer•46m ago
The trick is adding letter selections so you can press the underlined letter on your keyboard and get that option! You can do things really quickly that way!
mikkupikku•1h ago
I really wish they'd just make it easily customizable. I don't care if lay-users might mess it up and get confused, such users abandoned Firefox years ago anyway.
wtallis•44m ago
Mozilla should really try taking their extension ecosystem seriously, and deliver features like the AI chatbot integration as first-party extensions that come pre-installed but can be easily managed by users with a much better UI than about:config.
saghm•44m ago
Honestly, "go into about:config and flip some switches to remove stuff" is about as easy as I could imagine for allowing people to customize it. What would you suggest?
lamontcg•22m ago
Yeah, if you turn it all into buttons and settings in the actual settings menus, someone else is going to post a long rant about how the settings menus have a million confusing options that nobody uses...

Mine also isn't anywhere nearly as confusing as his by default, so this smells like a power-user-has-power-user-problems-and-solutions rant...

mmsc•20m ago
> Mine also isn't anywhere nearly as confusing as his by default

You can run the following and try it for yourself. Don't forget to highlight some text before right-clicking an image (e.g. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_World_Factbook)

  TMPPROF="$(mktemp -d /tmp/ff-tmp.XXXXXX)"
  /Applications/Firefox.app/Contents/MacOS/firefox -no-remote -profile "$TMPPROF"
w0m•59m ago
yea... I would consider it a ux regression to do the OPs tweaks.

To each their own; glad it's an option :)

autoexec•30m ago
How about Firefox just not fill their context menu with bullshit bloat and ads for shit nobody asked for like google lens and make it fully/easily customizable so that most users are happy and power users can add whatever they want.

It's pretty damn easy to make everyone happy.

OkayPhysicist•24m ago
It literally already is fully customizable. between userChrome, about:config, and extensions, you can do literally anything you like to your right click menu on Firefox.
autoexec•17m ago
I'd argue that you shouldn't need third party add-ons plus modifications to both userChrome and about:config to do it, so it could be easier. A "Customize Context Menu" under Edit would be nice and easy for even regular users to discover and take advantage of.
john_strinlai•20m ago
>makes it fully/easily customizable so that most users are happy [...] It's pretty damn easy to make everyone happy.

considering that it is already fully customizable, yet you are still complaining about it, i dont think so

autoexec•15m ago
> How about Firefox just not fill their context menu with bullshit bloat and ads for shit nobody asked for like google lens and [...] It's pretty damn easy to make everyone happy
john_strinlai•14m ago
>shit nobody asked for

i use (or have used) most of them. other people in this thread have said they used all of them at one point or another.

just because you dont use it does not make it "bullshit bloat and ads for shit nobody asked for". thats why you have the option to remove them :)

whats the next complaint?

autoexec•4m ago
That's why https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/google-lens-s... exits. Google lens is exactly the kind of thing add-ons are for. Some people might like it, they should be able to install it, but it doesn't belong in the browser by default.

This is the same mistake they made with Pocket and I'm guessing it was done for the same reason (money) since they went with a Google product and not Bing Visual Search or for that matter letting users configure what service they'd like to use for image searches. This was pure bloat. It's no different from Windows adding candy crush to the desktop by default where the same argument "Some people play it and it can be removed!" does nothing to change what it is: bloat that nobody asked for.

Snortibartfast•16m ago
Or you could do like Vivaldi, and have every menu configurable :)
darkwater•15m ago
Which adds more UI to control the feature as well, which someone will find ugly and unnecessary.
grayhatter•3m ago
This isn't as simple as making everyone happy.

It's about the disrespect of not asking. Could Firefox have asked if users wanted to enable AI features? Of course they could have, did they? Of course not, just think about how would asking would effect the shareholders!!

I don't disagree with the premise that it's hard to make everyone happy, but the problem isn't about pleasing everyone, it's about treating users with respect, and not jumping on the AI everywhere bandwagon, without asking first. Especially because Firefox has billed itself as privacy protecting, and AI is definitely not private focused.

mantra2•1h ago
I wish they had an always up to date guide on what each about:config option does.
alpaca128•1h ago
Or make them more discoverable. I spent so much time looking for a UI scaling setting, and in the end it turned out its name does not contain any obvious word like scale or size, instead it is called devPixelsPerPx. It isn't even consistent about Pixels vs Px.
jadar•1h ago
i see the author has a small vocabulary.
captn3m0•1h ago
This is disabling features entirely - I take screenshots using the Firefox feature sometimes, but never with the right click option. Same for autofills, printing, and devtool a11y features. I don't like the clutter, but I can't disable these either.
deathanatos•58m ago
> I take screenshots using the Firefox feature sometimes, but never with the right click option.

Um … how else do you access this feature?

(I use the context menu's item for that all the time … since that's the only way at it that I know of.)

saratogacx•31m ago
Ctrl-shift-s
imp0cat•26m ago
You can also put a tiny camera icon in the tool bar and take a screenshot by clicking on that.
EvilTerran•28m ago
You can add a screenshot button to the toolbar from the "Customise Toolbar" screen, does the exact same thing as that context menu item.
anonym29•1h ago
just use a gecko fork without the AI loael

librewolf is great

mmsc•1h ago
loael
wackget•1h ago
These prefs - and many others - can be placed in a user.js file: https://github.com/yokoffing/BetterFox
chrismorgan•1h ago
Long ago, I culled some items from the context menu via userChrome.css.

1. In about:config, turn pref toolkit.legacyUserProfileCustomizations.stylesheets on.

2. Create chrome/userChrome.css in your profile directory (which you can find from about:support).

3. Open the Browser Toolbox with Ctrl+Alt+Shift+I or ≡ → More tools → Browser Toolbox or Tools → Browser Tools → Browser Toolbox or some such thing. This is dev tools for the browser.

4. In the Inspector tab, search #contentAreaContextMenu to navigate to the <menupopup id="contentAreaContextMenu" …> element.

5. Look through its children. Decide which ones you don’t want, then kill them in CSS.

From my userChrome.css (I think this must be something like a decade old because I started typing curly quotes somewhere around then):

  /* I don't want *two* items for Inspect, just the one main one please. */
  #context-inspect-a11y,
  /* I'm happy to use Ctrl+Shift+S; I don't need a context menu item for it. */
  #context-take-screenshot,
  #context-sep-screenshots,
  /* I don't use Firefox's password manager. */
  #fill-login,
  #fill-login-generated-password,
  #manage-saved-logins,
  #passwordmgr-items-separator {
      display: none;
  }
The article takes the approach of disabling features (e.g. devtools.accessibility.enabled). I take the approach of leaving the features enabled (I want the accessibility stuff!) and just removing the specific context menu item that I found annoying.

(… and I see at the end of the article that this approach is what the next post is to be about. Heh. Posted before reading to the end. Probably would still have posted roughly the same thing.)

OkayPhysicist•16m ago
The other great use for userChrome is reclaiming the space at the top of the browser if you use tree-style tabs. With just the url bar, the window is close enough to full-screen when I close the tab tree that I rarely feel the need to use F11.
wiseowise•1h ago
> To be blunt: holy fucking shit, what the fuck is all of this shit? 26 rows of which 2 are greyed-out (aka: fucking useless)

Chef’s kiss.

pmontra•1h ago
That was a really long menu. I do use "Save Link As…” when the link is obviously a file to download and I don't want it in the default folder.

I think that I never used “Set Image as Desktop Background…” in all my life. That's a very narrow use case to get its own menu entry.

chuckadams•1h ago
I use "translate selection" all the time, but a proper menu editor wouldn't go amiss. Remember when apps had those?
WarmWash•1h ago
For some reason Mozilla has been super focused on firefox feature pack rather than general usability for some time now. It's obviously not been working, but they must be convinced that if they just add xyz new feature, firefox will make a comeback.

Just make the goddamn browser fast, lightweight, and stable. Forget everything else.

Except spell check. Please god fix that too.

WillAdams•59m ago
I just want to take a moment to note that I am _very_ grateful for the flexibility of this configuration and that it affords the power/option to disable scrolling with a stylus (effectively dumbing it down to an 11th touch input) and allowing it to function as I've come to expect since the days of PenPoint and Windows for Pen Computing to select text and so forth.
deathanatos•54m ago
… railing against greyed-out items is… interesting. One of my biggest peeves with a lot of modern software is the trend of "gaslight the user about the existence of functionality".

A lot of software (Github, Okta, etc. etc.) will just delete portions of their UI, usually because you don't have permission to access it, or even just some of it. So, if you google "how do I do X?" the AI — assuming it gets it right at all — will tell you to click on UI that doesn't exist. Even if you then scroll to the organic docs, those will also have you click UI that does not exist.

A greyed-out item gives you the affordance of knowing that that feature / path exists, even if it's not available right here, right now. Truly good UI would also give me an affordance of knowing why (e.g., a tooltip saying "to access blah, you need permission blah"), but that's just asking for the moon, I know.

But when you're staring at docs referencing a non-existence menu item: is it because I lack a permission? What permission? Or perhaps the docs are just out of date? — you don't know!

olivia-banks•53m ago
I've been wondering about the Polish thing. On the screenshot at the top of the page, it reads "Translate Selection to Polish," and I initially thought this might just be something gleaned from the author's locale, but the tld is .hu, and I recall seeing "Polish" as the default "international" language option on a number of services (such as Google Translate).

Is there a technical reason for this that Polish is defaulted to more often than not? Or is this just a me thing.

mmsc•50m ago
It's gleaned from my locale. .hu is irrelevant; my alternative keyboard on my system is Polish
silverwind•52m ago
Mozilla really needs to trim this menu down by default. Who needs "Print selection" in this day and age?
SllX•50m ago
All those items in the context menu are one of the reasons that context menus are so good. Ideally you never need to go to the menu bar for much of anything because the right menu item is right there in the context menu where your cursor is already aiming.
CamperBob2•27m ago
The newest Firefox build has a nice feature: you highlight some text on a page, and instead of having to right-click and navigate to the AI submenu to bring up a list of canned prompts, none of which are what you actually want to ask, it just pops up a button next to the highlighted text that you can click to enter a prompt immediately.

So this guy's rant, besides not making a whole lot of sense (first he complains about the length of the right-click menu, then he complains that they moved the AI stuff to a side menu...?) is also obsolete.

g947o•23m ago
I wonder when was the last time any user used the "Email image" feature.
eikenberry•18m ago
No way to remove the most annoying thing.. how Copy takes the top spot away from the back arrow when you've highlighted text of any sort. I don't mind the Copy option but don't change the standard menu, add it to the bottom.
sznio•13m ago
this is how ui was supposed to be.

i can pick out the button i want instantly. i don't have to navigate multiple buttons to do anything

bayesianbot•12m ago
Just as FYI, for people currently using firefox or want to use firefox but found its keyboard control (or plugins like Vimperator) lacking, I really recommend glide[0] highly.

I've used qutebrowser for years as I feel the keyboard controlled web is much more convenient, and there hasn't been any reasonable competition to qutebrowser. The vim keyboard control plugins for chrome or firefox don't fit the bill for me, they feel slow, are often out of focus, and quite limited.

glide fixes all of those problems, supports firefox extensions and has a really powerful and approachable scripting API. It's alpha but feels quite ready, I've been running it a few weeks full time and loved the experience.

[0] https://github.com/glide-browser/glide

drecked•11m ago
My issue with this post isn’t so much the post itself but with what it demonstrates about culture today.

20 years ago one would have written the same post on Blogger but the odds are it would have been framed as “here’s how you can clean up the Firefox menu”.

It’s not like vitriolic content didn’t exist. But the vitriolic content was usually limited to holy war posts, when a Mac user was disparaging PCs or vice versa, or if it was a vim vs emacs conversation. And even then there was an understanding that no one was being entirely serious.

But in today’s social media/political environment, every post is turned up to 11.

grayhatter•9m ago
I'm sure part of this is hindsight bias, but software was less intentionally user hostile in the before times.

Firefox used to release features that improved privacy. Today they add features that reduce privacy. Enabled by default, with no easy way to disable or remove the spyware link.

The tone should shift, in step with how much disrespect companies decide to inflict on their users.

Snortibartfast•8m ago
Ironically, the only[1] right-click option I used was changed into something more cumbersome: "open image" which was changed to "open image in new tab".

[1] I exaggerate a bit, sometimes I use uBlock Origin's "block element".

kyusan0•8m ago
There must be something wrong with Firefox on MacOS, I don't experience the same on linux. Options only show up when relevant, i.e. Save Image as only when hovering over an image, translate selection only when text is highlighted with the cursor, etc.

The longest right click menu I could find by clicking around various elements is no more than 12 items, two of which are from extensions.

I'd love to know why it's different.