by nicoburns
3 subcomments
- Brave's adblocking engine is a neat example of open source and the ease of sharing lbraries in Rust. It uses Servo crates (also used by Firefox) to parse CSS and evaluate selectors, and is then itself published as a crate on crates.io where it can be pulled in by others who may want to use it.
- I am surprised there does not exist a community fork of Brave yet that strips out all of the commercial stuff (rewards, AI, own updates), making it suitable for inclusion in the repos of mainstream free/libre Linux distros.
- 162 to 104 is not 75% reduction... Who calculates reduction percentage like that?!
- I just found out Brave supports Vertical tabs, https://brave.com/blog/vertical-tabs/
I might have to try switching from FF...
- I haven't seen an ad nor in iOS nor in Mac since I installed brave.
The browser, for me , works perfect
- I hope that this is the start of developers being conscious of using resources efficiently again, especially in the browser.
The more rust gets written, the better AI will be able to write it for people... I like to be optimistic.
by upcoming-sesame
4 subcomments
- I like Brave but the only thing that keeps me from using it on mobile is the lack of extension. That's why Firefox is my daily driver on Android
by ComputerGuru
2 subcomments
- Is that 45 MiB per-tab? People are laughing it off, but since each tab is a process these days..
- Is Brave still a front for a cryptocurrency pump-and-dump scheme?
- They could cut it 110%, so my available RAM grew bigger, and I would still not trust them. They have been caught with their hands deep in the cookie jar too many times.
- Why don't Mozilla make or use such engine in its browser? Make something really native for dealing with ads and annoyances. The irony is Brave smartly uses Rust which were forsaken by Mozilla. I know Mozilla seems to have something for ads but honestly I don't even know what it really does, beside its shield icon.
- It's getting harder and harder to main Firefox. Brave's split tab feature is simple but so brilliant.
by bqmjjx0kac
7 subcomments
- I'm not sure how impressed I should feel about saving 45 MiB these days.
- Why don't they put these ads behind a Bloom filter? That's a lot of memory use, even with FlatBuffers.
- Perhaps it's obvious but I'm missing some (briefly) justification why FlatBuffers was better, not Protobuf/Capnproto/...
by methuselah_in
0 subcomment
- But why not use Firefox with ublock? Brave is also chrome beneath. If google pulls the plug what is brave or other browsers anyway?
- Funny that the iOS update notes don't mention this at all:
> in this release:
> Other enhancements, stability improvements, and security updates
No mention of efficiency, or adblocking whatsoever!
by ReptileMan
3 subcomments
- Well brave still uses 300MB per tab on linux and almost 700MB per tab on Windows. So they do have a long way in front of them.
by VladVladikoff
3 subcomments
- Is Brave actually a good browser now? Did they rewrite it or something? Last time I looked it was a janky JavaScript mess.
by ThierryBuilds
1 subcomments
- I am curious to know what was the contribution of switching to FlatBuffers in that improvement.
- The Brave is the reasons why I can tolerate iphone )
- Brave also installed a VPN an a VPN service without permission on my Windows machine, and then didn’t disable or remove 3 separate scheduled tasks in Windows Scheduler once I’d uninstalled it. The VPN issue was open for like 8+ months on GitHub too - and at first they denied doing it at all. For all I know it still installs it, but I removed this malware-type shit when this all happened so I couldn’t tell you.
I’ll never trust them again after that.
- Does Brave actually block ads now? Or does it still replace them with ads for scanmy cryptocurrency?
by KnuthIsGod
0 subcomment
- [flagged]