@dredmorbius is it at all possible to install a tampermonkey extension ? a lot of this sounds correctable with user css.
not that it absolves the site designers of course
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@dredmorbius is it at all possible to install a tampermonkey extension ? a lot of this sounds correctable with user css. 8 comments
@zens No. (It's your job to know these things.) (That's a really difficult job.) (Endpoint / device / combinatorials / usage-domain anticipation turn out to be complicated.) (Yes, I've worked in testing / QA, amongst other roles. Not my favourite by a long shot. But I've done it.) @dredmorbius e-ink devices isn’t one of the things we usually consider, and i have never had one, so i don’t know how featured the browsers are @zens Well, I'm here to tell you that this is your job now ;-) |
@zens Keep in mind that the two browsers with greatest use today, Safari/iOS and Chrome/Android do not support extensions at all.
Firefox/Android (or Fennec/Android) do support LIMITED extensions. This includes DarkReader (previously mentioned), but not either Stylus (CSS manager) or Tampermonkey (Javascript manager).
My strongly preferred e-ink browser, EinkBro, does not support extensions at all, though it has some integrated tools: font zoom, White Background, JS toggle, and a few others.
(It also defaults to having a touch-area based page-based navigation, which is the real killer feature, as scroll and e-ink play very, very, very poorly. Yes, you can still scroll, but it's not necessary much of the time, and there are other options.)
So no, Tampermonkey or similar CSS/JS managers really doesn't address the problem here. I'd love it if they did.
@zens Keep in mind that the two browsers with greatest use today, Safari/iOS and Chrome/Android do not support extensions at all.
Firefox/Android (or Fennec/Android) do support LIMITED extensions. This includes DarkReader (previously mentioned), but not either Stylus (CSS manager) or Tampermonkey (Javascript manager).