This post applies to Firefox Quantum — v.57, v.60esr, v.68esr, v.78esr, and newer) Instead of Lubuntu, consider BunsenLabs, which is based on Debian. BunsenLabs will run in a computer with 1 gigabyte of RAM, probably with plenty of swapping, so you'll still need at least 2 Gb of RAM. BunsenLabs LiveCD's actual commit after boot is ~200 Mb, which is equivalent to Windows XP SP3. BunsenLabs is one of the few distros that offers a live CD (yes, a CD image), but the LiveCD edition is meant only for 32-bit systems. As for Firefox, then off the top of my head: In Settings:
- Disable "Check spelling as you type"
- uncheck Use recommended settings;
- Play with "user hardware acceleretion"
- Set the Content process limit to 1
- Disable smooth scrolling
- Disable "recommend extensions as you browse"
- Disable "recommend features as you browse"
- Disable search suggestions
- Uncheck the search engines that you do not use
- Under Privacy & Security > Permissions:
In Settings for Autoplay (new window), set the default for all sites to block audio and video. Use Ctrl+I, and in the Page Info window under the Permissions tab list for a domain, to allow audio/video on YouTube, for example.
about:config
, set:
browser.sessionhistory.max_entries
to 25 (from 50)browser.sessionhistory.max_total_viewers
to 0 (from -1)browser.sessionstore.max_tabs_undo
to 5, 7, or 10 (from 25)
browser.sessionstore.interval
from15000
*to* something greaterextensions.update.interval
from86400
*to* something greatermedia.peerconnection.enabled
tofalse
media.peerconnection.video.enabled
tofalse
- Install the NoScript extension, as it uses a whitelist (with some built-in entries). Set it to display full domains in settings. You'll have to permit certain domains from the NoScript pop-up menu to make a site work.
- Install uBlock Origin or Adblock Plus to block ads. While NoScript blocks most of the harmful cruft, one of the two adblockers won't let video ads pass through.
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