Soonish (2017) is a good overview of cutting-edge technologies, most of which are still in the near future, some of which have made dramatic progress in the last few years.
It took me several years to get around to actually reading it, which maybe wasnât the best approach for something about the near future. So itâs been interesting to look at the chapters on space colonization, asteroid mining, robot swarms, fusion and so on where things are either still just as far away or have otherwise turned out to be more complicated (as the Weinersmiths discovered when rearching their follow-up, A City on Mars)âŠ
âŠand the chapter on this cool new genetic modification technique called CRISPRâŠwhich has continued making headlines, with treatments for things like sickle cell disease approved and put into practice!
Some things have been moving faster than others.
Full of the authorsâ trademark irreverent humor, with cartoons scattered throughout, itâs still worth reading even if itâs a bit late!
I started buying eBooks from Kobo back in the early 2010s, when they were partnered with IndieBound to send a cut to local indie bookshops and I linked it with Mysterious Galaxy. (These days, Bookshop.org is IndieBoundâs preferred choice for that.)
It took a bit to get the Android app configured nicely, and even now the service can still be pushy. Unlike Amazon, Kobo still offers in-app purchases, and it wants you to buy more books before you read the ones you have.
I turned off a lot of âfeaturesâ early on - I donât want recommended books to pop up in my notifications, and I certainly donât need achievements like a Steam game to encourage me to read more. (I think theyâve since gotten rid of that one.) You know what encourages me to read more? Having time to read.
Anyway, once I got that settled, Iâve been reasonably happy with the app on a decadeâs worth of phones, a tablet and a Boox Poke3 e-reader.
Reading Choices
The Kobo Clara e-reader is the best dedicated, single-bookstore e-reader Iâve used, but of course it doesnât handle books bought from other stores unless theyâre DRM-free. (Probably. It might be possible to side-load books from other sources that also use Adobe DRM. I should try that.) Thatâs the main reason I bought, and still use, the Boox tablet: I can install almost anything on it.
In addition to the mobile app and dedicated devices, you can read most purchases directly on the website now. Any books that are DRM-free, you can just download as standard .ePub files and read on whatever device you want. Of course most of the books they sell are locked with DRM, and you can only âdownloadâ a link to Adobe Digital Editions.
While writing this up, I discovered thereâs a desktop app for Windows and macOS. The Windows app you download from the website feels like a wrapper around the website. But thereâs also a bare-bones app on the Microsoft Store that seems to have been built for the resounding flop that was the Windows 8 letâs-try-to-make-a-tablet-OS era.
Reviewing
Kobo encourages you to rate and review books as you finish them, even if you donât have a decent keyboard on-hand. The way theyâre displayed is also geared toward short reviews. This is another reason I usually cross-post only a summary there, rather than the full review.
Similar to Arc, Zen has a non-cluttered interface that mostly stays out of your way and is built around a sidebar that encourages you to keep things simple and organized. Iâm not sure if the design is specifically inspired by the aspects of Arc that people have liked most, or if theyâre just chasing the same goals.
Unlike Arc, Zen is Free-as-in-Libre Software, built on Firefox instead of on Chromium, runs on more platforms (Windows, macOS and Linux), and doesnât require you to sign into a cloud account just to use the browser. And it actually has bookmarks! (It also doesnât have AI features like Arcâs summaries and so on.)
Like Waterfox it removes Mozillaâs existing data collection. It doesnât go as far on privacy as LibreWolf, but itâs notable that Zenâs privacy policy starts out with âInformation We Do Not Collect.â
Connections and Compatibility
It can connect to Firefox Sync (which is encrypted) and is compatible with Firefox add-ons. There are the usual hoops to jump through when you first install it to get native messaging to connect to KeePassXC, unless youâre using running it through Flatpak on Linux, in which case the hoops donât work either (see below).
Zen canât play media locked by Widevine DRM, because the small team canât justify spending the money on the license when there are other things they want to build. (For comparison, LibreWolf rejects DRM support on principle.) If you want to watch Netflix or whatever on your desktop, you can use another browser like Waterfox for it.
As with LibreWolf and Waterfox, not all of the documentation has been copied and updated to be Zen-specific yet, and in some cases it just links straight to the Firefox docs. I do appreciate that the About box tells you both what Zen version youâre using and what Firefox version itâs built on.
Flatpak, AppImage & Linux
When installed using Flatpak, web browsers canât connect over native messaging to KeePassXC. And Zen doesnât actually open the first page when opening a link from another app unless itâs already running. These are both fixed by using the AppImage, but now I need to manually add a zen.desktop file and icon so itâll show up in the system menu. Then I have to either update the AppImage manually or install another tool to update the AppImage automatically, plus it turns out thereâs another bug where the AppImage Zen opens a new copy of Thunderbird on the rare occasions I click on an email address, which launches a blank profile to avoid conflicting with the already running oneâŠ
I finally ended up just downloading the tarball and pointing zen.desktop to it. Itâs old-school, but it all works properly!
Availability
Regular installers with updaters for Windows and Mac. Flatpak, AppImage and tarballs for Linux. Both Intel/AMD and ARM on all platforms.
No mobile version. I think the closest comparison would still be Arc Search, but as with the desktop version, Arc isnât Free (just free) or Gecko-based.
A decent minimalist SMS/MMS app that doesnât sync your messages to Google or any other online services. Can archive or delete conversations and block numbers, and handle custom alert sounds per conversation. Pull-down notifications include action buttons for reply-stop, opening links, and copying confirmation codes to the clipboard.
It doesnât support RCS, and it doesnât support swipe actions (which is really too bad - itâs so convenient to delete-or-archive that way). You can block a number, but you canât report it as spam.
MMS support seems a bit flaky - I can receive images, and I can send them to actual phones, but I canât send images to Google Voice.
Still, it works well enough. Especially if you want to use something like Signal for all your actual conversations and leave texting for automated notices.
Surprisingly, I like the mobile Arc browser better than its desktop counterpart. And it is a browser, despite the nameâŠand despite an intro that makes you try out an AI-powered âBrowse For Meâ search-to-summary feature. (Itâs kind of weird, but itâs probably better than the ones showing up at the front of a Google search these days.)
Arc has a much simpler visual design than Firefox, Chrome, and their major derivatives. It does the main things you want to use a mobile browser for and mostly stays out of your way. Thereâs an ad blocker built in. Like the desktop Arc, it can automatically close tabs youâve left open for a while.
I particularly like the open tab list: itâs built like the systemâs open app list, and thereâs just something satisfying about flinging a page away when youâre done with it!
Limited Sync
Sync only sends open tabs, and only one way: the mobile browser can pull tabs from your desktop browser, but thereâs currently no built-in way to send a page from your phone to your desktop. Or even to another mobile device.
You can share it to any other app on your phone, of course. Iâve used KDE Connect to send a page to my desktop, and saving to Pocket or Wallabag to re-open a page on my tablet.
Problems (or lack thereof)
So far the only problem Iâve run into with it (aside from the one-way sync) is oddly specific: The Pixelfed app canât log in when Arc is the default browser. Just that one. Other apps with OAuth logins are able to use it just fine. Well, that and the one video conferencing site I have to use on a semi-regular basis that doesnât work in anything other than brand-name Google Chrome.
I havenât even had any issues with filling passwords from KeePass2Droid, which Vivaldi sometimes blocks with its own autofill.
The AI Question
I look at anything marketed as âAIâ with suspicion. At least Arcâs approach is to look for something it might be useful for instead of just grafting a chatbot onto a web browser like Opera, Brave, and sigh now Firefox. But using âBrowse For Meâ still sends your search queries to OpenAI for processing.