The Pale Moon Web browser project solves a problem that many Mozilla Firefox users would like to solve. It is a fork of Mozilla’s official browser developed by Moonchild Productions that provides users with access to all of their favorite Firefox extensions but eliminates the Australis interface, which some dislike.
Firefox debuted the new user interface in late April in the Firefox 29 release. That interface redesign was the first major UI overhaul since Firefox 4 was released in March 2011.
Pale Moon started as a source-level tweaked version of Firefox. It retains the pre-Australis interface design, which Firefox officials described as a more intuitive design that users requested. Pale Moon focuses on what many Firefox users consider a more efficient and easier-to-use interface.
If you love the Firefox browser’s rich extension infrastructure but hate its new design, Pale Moon might shed a more favorable light on your Web-browsing activities.
It is completely built from its source with carefully selected features and optimizations to maximize the browser’s speed, stability, and user experience. However, it maintains compatibility with thousands of Firefox extensions.
New Old Look
Pale Moon’s controls and visual feedback are familiar to long-time Firefox users. For example, it has grouped navigation buttons.
The retro design features do not end there. Pale Moon’s bookmarks toolbar is enabled by default. Its tabs are next to page content by default, and it comes with a functional status bar.
I found that aside from some expected community labels and branding cosmetics, Pale Moon’s look and feel are classic Firefox. After I set up the Preferences the way I have them in Firefox, I had to remind myself that the browser was Pale Moon.
Breezy Setup
The setup is designed for Firefox users. On the first run, Pale Moon asks if you want to import your browser history, bookmarks, and preferences from your Firefox installation.
That process works flawlessly, but it does not grab the Firefox extensions. So, some manual labor is involved in installing Firefox extensions and setting preferences where needed.
Since the code base comes from Firefox, the extension add-on procedure is identical in Pale Moon. Find the Add-on access in the Tools drop-down menu.
That slight effort is well worth it. I am not a fan of the Australis interface, so Pale Moon is a great alternative that keeps me in my browsing comfort zone.
No Menu Maze
Just to reinforce the notion, go to the Edit menu and select the Preferences panel. You can easily find what you need where it used to be.
For example, the hide Menu row functionality is restored with some extras. Your choices of toolbars and sidebars can be visible or hidden from the View menu.
If you uncheck Menu Bar, Pale Moon places a tab-like button labeled “Pale Moon” with a down arrow in the first tab position. Click this button to open access to what is hidden from the Menu row.
On this menu panel, you will see familiar features such as New Tab, New Private Window, Add-ons, Bookmarks, History, and more. To unhide any items, click Preferences to check the desired view. Then the Pale Moon menu button disappears, as there is no need for it.
UI Bonus
The Australis interface in Firefox places a button on the far right top corner. This is the menu button that provides access to what used to be in the File and Edit drop-down menus.
In Pale Moon, a similar button or icon is located along the top right edge of the browser window, but its functionality is completely different.
The button lists all open tabs. This is a very handy feature.
It opens a ribbon that displays a large thumbnail view of each tab. This overlay covers the top half of the Pale Moon browser window. To move to a tab, click on it or click the large X in the upper right corner of the thumbnail overlay.
More Features
Much of the good stuff about Pale Moon lies under the hood. Taken together, all of it contributes to a more efficient performance.
For example, Pale Moon is optimized for modern processors such as SSE2. It removes much of the Firefox code’s built-in bloat, including the social API, accessibility features, and WebRTC.
Regarding the social API, the code still exists in Pale Moon but is disabled by default.
Besides support for Firefox extensions, Pale Moon will eventually support more than the default theme.
This is perhaps one of two real weaknesses in the current version of Pale Moon — at least the Linux version. The Appearance tab on the Get Add-Ons panel only has the Default theme 24.7.1 by Mozilla.
Getting It
The second weakness of Pale Moon is its installation process. This project is too new to be integrated into various Linux distro repositories, and the developer’s website does not provide packaged versions, such as a .deb packet, that can easily be installed through the GDebi Package Installer.
Instead, the website points you to a Linux version download that deposits an archived file on your hard drive. It contains two files: a readme text file with installation details and the .sh installation program.
For less-aware Linux users, opening a terminal window to issue commands to install an .sh file can be daunting. This .sh file fetches the needed files and installs, Pale Moon. In most Linux distros, the end result will be a successful installation with Pale Moon added to the launch menu.
I installed Pale Moon in Linux Mint, Ubuntu, and Solyd X with no difficulty. However, the directions included in the readme file might not be clear to Linux users unfamiliar with working inside a terminal box.
Bottom Line
You can find additional support details at the Pale Moon wiki and the Pale Moon forum.
Generally, I was very pleased with the Pale Moon Web browser on my computers, which has more than 2 GB of available RAM. However, running it on very low-powered computers might cause it to close suddenly.
It needs at least 256 MB of free RAM and 512 MB or more is recommended. On an old laptop with slightly less than 1 GB of RAM, I had fast performance but occasional sudden crashes.
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