Basilisk and Pale Moon are both projects of Moonchild Productions...each browser has XP forks from different developers. roytam1's forks are...
What versions of NVDA or JAWS are using? It's possible the latest versions for Windows XP will likely yield the best results and have the most...
I realize it's been a long time since I last posted here, but I wanted to report on an interesting discovery. At this point, I've tried virtually...
roytam1 is a very nice guy who lives in Hong Kong and maintains several different XP-compatible browsers, a crop currently including New Moon...
Unless you know what you're doing, I wouldn't recommend the UOC patch, actually. I used it for a little while, and it broke some sites that I...
No problem, my friend! New Moon/Mypal 27 still work very well in 2019, and are the newest browsers that can run on virtually any PC you have (New...
Hello! My apologies for not responding sooner. It should be possible to use the Gecko 45 patch with 52ESR, but please be very careful--these...
I would still be using Firefox 52.9.1ESR, if not for a few 'quirks' it has which Serpent 55 doesn't (the main one being that if you keep it open...
For now, Serpent 55 may be the most 'future-proof' browser there is, at least for those who still want to use their old XUL addons. Maxthon has...
You're welcome--for me, Serpent 55 is a good choice for XP (presuming you have a processor with SSE2 and 2GB or more of RAM). It has better HTML5...
Ah, okay! If you're smart with your browsing habits, Maxthon shouldn't be too bad. For folks who don't do a lot of stuff that involves social...
To ClippyBeer (I hope you will see this): from the bottom of--nah, I'm not going to be that schmaltzy, but you know what I mean--thank you VERY...
That is indeed true--Ivy Bridge was the last generation to receive proper (i.e., fully tested) XP drivers. There do exist drivers for Haswell, but...
IIRC Firefox 43 was the last version to have the "Ask Me Every Time" feature; this was removed from 44 and hasn't returned since (though the...
Those old DOS-era machines were and are bulletproof. Durable as you can get, and built to last a lot more than the PCs of today. If you can get...
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