

The browser does have one potential down side, in that it may be incompatible with some extensions. So how much faster can the browser be? That's a tricky question, as performance varies greatly depending on what's being tested. Pale Moon, though, is optimised to take full advantage of modern processors, and this can give it a huge advantage over Firefox in some areas. In particular, Firefox is compiled with the most conservative of settings, to ensure that it'll run on even ancient CPUs. And Pale Moon also drops support for Internet Explorer's ActiveX and ActiveX scripting technology, which also offers a security benefit as it means the browser can't be infected by malicious ActiveX controls. The crash report has also been stripped out, as it's designed to work with server-side technology that isn't available on.

The program has been made more lightweight, for instance, by stripping out little-used components like the accessibility features, and the parental controls. Marcella Pace: Website My Modern Met granted permission to feature photos by Marcella Pace.Pale Moon is a customised version of Firefox, which has been carefully optimised for speed and efficiency. She has also put together a similar look at the colors of the sun.

It's a path that isn't a circle with man at the center, but a spiral that is constantly evolving.” Marcella Pace loves showing how the Moon can change in color, even over the course of one day during its moonrise. To live in harmony we need to be aware that it's not just fellow man that is our neighbor, but that all forms of life are on this eternal path with us. “It's really important to me that this photo carries a message of respect for all forms of life. “There's something magnetic about the photo and I get daily compliments about it from around the world,” Pace says. After being selected as a NASA Astronomy Photo of the Day in November 2020, it's continued to circle the internet. While many of Pace's photographs have received praise, her colorful composite has, in particular, take on a life of its own.

In fact, in a recent photograph taken during moonrise, it's possible to see all the different colors that it takes on as it makes its way up different layers of the atmosphere. So, while the final composite displays work done over 10 years, Pace is careful to note that it doesn't actually take that long to photograph so many colors of the moon.
