debian-u...@howorth.org.uk wrote: > Chris Green <c...@isbd.net> wrote: > > songbird <songb...@anthive.com> wrote: > > > Chris Green wrote: > > > ... > > > > It would be much easier if I could simply tell epiphany (or > > > > another browser) **not** to try and become the default for > > > > everything, rather than having to try and unset all the changes > > > > it has made. > > > > > > Chris, for something like testing i would just set up > > > another user. > > > > > I guess that's a possible way. However my use of epiphany tends to be > > "oh, this web page doesn't work in vivaldi, I'll try it in epiphany", > > having to log out and log in to another user to do this rather defeats > > the object. > > I simply have a terminal already running as another user (I start a > terminal and then su - another_user) so I just have to type the browser > name if I want to use it. Or use up-arrow to access the browser > history. For me that seems to be a tolerable level of effort. > How does that help? The other user will have all the same default browser settings that you do. You can't install something for use by one user and not another user, at least not using apt you can't.
-- Chris Green ยท