 This is Falcon, which is a browser made by KD and a lot of people ask me like in live streams why should I even use Falcon? And let me address that right away. So if you're happy with Firefox Mozilla or even Chromium or Chrome, just stick to it. Don't worry, it's not like you're missing out of some super important browser feature. However, there are some use cases where you might be interested in actually using Falcon and to make an example, I have used Falcon myself for a year or two before switching back to Mozilla. And that was because of a couple of reasons. First, it handled touch input better than Firefox. If you like, I don't know, like zoom in with two fingers that works better here compared to Firefox. But also it follows your system theme. You can see as an example in the tabs you've got the blue line which is made by Breeze and in general all of the system dialogue the contacts menus, those are styled by the actual queue style which is Breeze. So it will follow whatever theme you make. If you use Kevantum as an example and you want your browser to use Kevantum as well, then Falcon is your best choice. So if you're happy with what you have, stick to it. But if you're interested in something that follows your system theme and that was why I used it, then Falcon is well made for you. And it's a browser, it's I think a simple one compared to the long, whole standing Firefox and Chromium, but I mean, it works. So first of all, Falcon 3.2. When I first heard the news I was like, wait, Falcon is still alive? And well, when you don't know whether a project is still alive or not, you should always check for commits. So this is the GitLab page for Falcon and here you've got High Story and just clicking that, you will see all of the things that has happened in the past and you can see that there are some commits except here. So in this period of time going from August and before, there's not much happening, but then there's people actually writing tests and then Jonathan Redell actually packaged the 3.2 version. And likely the new version is the everything that has been done really since the last one, which was something like three years ago. So there is a lot of changes, not because it's so actively developed, as you can actually see, if you check this one out and you compare it to Plasma Desktop as an example, it's a much different story. But still, three years of work is three years of work and the change log is pretty long. Let's try to summarize it a bit. It's not very interesting, but it's important. The most important feature is the first one. Of course, there's now support for screen capture. So if you've got a website, I don't know, Zoom, I guess. If it supports it, you can share your screen, which is absolutely necessary nowadays, I think. You also get an option for an internal PDF-Hume-based viewer if you're seeing a PDF from the internet, so you don't actually have it to open with a third-party app. And by the way, Conqueror, which was a holder Firefox by KD, was absolutely amazing at doing this. And then for the cookie manager, you can actually now select more than one cookie at the same time to actually manage them multiple at the same time. I've seen websites citing this feature, like this will help you make things more secure, more private, but no, it's just an user improvement. It's easier to select multiple items, okay? And then there's a lot, whole of the stuff here, of UI refinements. I won't go through them all because they're boring, but this stuff like, I don't know, where is it? The bookmark manager don't actually allow to create bookmarks without a parent, so you have to select where you're creating the bookmark, which is useful because it's a tree-like structure, so you can actually sort, make sure you don't lose any bookmark by putting them in the right categories. And in the preferences, there's now a link in the KD store for installing themes and extension. And again, I understand that you want to talk about this feature in news articles about Falcon, but it's just a new link. It's not that much. The next one is interesting. There is initial support for downloading themes or extensions. However, remember that given that it's not that highly developed, the initial support might be from, I don't know, one year and a half ago and the follow-up may be never arrived. We can truly know. So it is very good news that we do see a new version of Falcon. Hopefully the next one will be in less than three years. And it doesn't mean that Falcon is super active, but it does mean that there is some work going on and that's important for such a browser. Now, before you jump into the comments saying, okay, but I don't like Falcon because it doesn't support X or doesn't support Y, let me tell you, okay, that's not a point. If you want a full-fledged browser, you got to go with Firefox or Chromium or Edge. I'm just kidding. So Falcon is not made and can't really be made to fit that use case. Most of KD developers that I know actually use Firefox in their daily usage, not because Falcon is bad, but it can't fit that certain kind of use cases. However, there are cases where Falcon is very much needed, just like Angelfish. Angelfish is in a similar situation. I did a video about Angelfish a while ago and there's no browser really that works only nooks on attached device such as a phone, so Angelfish went and tried to fill that gap. It won't be Firefox. Angelfish will never be Firefox, but it's a browser that knows what it's supposed to do and does it, just like Falcon. And that was it. Thanks for following. Falcon is a nice browser and of course words are hard to say and pronounce Thanks also to all of the patrons that support actually the show. And if you're interested in saying, I can do this as well, I can do that. If you're interested in seeing more content from me, then well, I've done a lot. I've done a video about why I'm currently using GNOME. You might have noticed that I'm using GNOME and you might be interested in knowing why, but I've also done videos like reviewing GNOME before that, before even switching to it and much more stuff, Linux, the Linux video that the Linux video that the Linux made, I managed to say it, stuff like that. So if you're interested, go along, subscribe, the bell thingy. See you next time.