TOPIC: WEBMAIL
Turning off push notifications in Firefox 46
7th May 2016Firefox 44 introduced a feature I only recently noticed when Yahoo Mail offered browser notifications for new emails; I did not need this and could not switch it off permanently for that site. This meant I was bothered each time I checked that email address, an unnecessary irritation. Other websites offered similar push notifications but allowed permanent deactivation, making this a site-specific function unless you take an alternative approach.
Open a new browser tab and enter about:config
in the address bar, then press return. If this is your first time, a warning message will appear, which you can dismiss permanently. This reveals a searchable list of options. Find dom.webnotifications.enabled
and dom.webnotifications.serviceworker.enabled
. By default, these values are set to 'true'. Double-click each one to change them to 'false'. This will prevent push notification offers from web services like Yahoo Mail, reducing intrusions during your browsing.
The case of a wide open restriction
7th November 2007The addition of IMAP capability to Gmail attracted a lot of attention in the blogosphere last week, and I managed to flick the switch for the beast courtesy of the various instructions that were out there. However, when I pottered back to the settings, the IMAP settings had disappeared.
A brief look at the Official Gmail Blog confirmed why: the feature wasn't to be available to those who hadn't set their language as US English. My setting of UK English explained why I wasn't seeing it again, a strange observation given that they are merely variants of the same language; I have no idea why I saw it the first time around.
My initial impression was that the language setting used was an operating system or browser one, but this is not how it is. In fact, it is the language that you set for Gmail itself in its settings; choosing US English was sufficient to make the IMAP settings reappear, while choosing UK English made them disappear again.
Personally, I am not certain why the distinction was made in the first place, but I have Evolution merrily working away with Gmail's IMAP interface without a bother. To get it going, I needed that imap.gmail.com needed an SSL connection while smtp.gmail.com needed a TLS one. After that, I was away and no port numbers needed to be supplied, unlike Outlook.