5/13/2024 0 Comments Installing brave browser ubuntu![]() ![]() After doing this, the system still showed version 1.37.116 as installed in the Pop!_Shop but neither the ‘Install’ or ‘Open’ buttons did anything so I ran sudo apt purge brave-browser and rebooted again and then reinstalled Brave from the POP!_Shop widget. I decided to remove Brave with sudo apt remove brave-browser followed by sudo apt autoremove to clean up dependencies then reboot. Did the OS update do something really strange? Is there any possibility that TWO different Brave versions somehow got installed and the favourites link on the dash is still pointing to the older version? I’m quite sure that the last time I ran a speed test through nPerf it reported the browser as “ Chrome 100.0”! Since all updates are done through the built-in updater this shouldn’t be the case but I’m lost as to other possibilities. Something strange going on here! When I looked at the Pop!_Shop widget, it shows their current version as 1.37.116 (April 15 2022) and shows it as ‘ Installed’ but that doesn’t agree with the information taken directly from the browsers ‘ About Brave’ page that I copied into my original post (showing Version 1.15.76). As it seems to be working OK now (once I imported my bookmarks and re-did my settings) I’m going to leave well enough alone and NOT upgrade to the latest version until it shows up in updates in case there are any customisations Pop! does that deviate from the original. After doing this, the system still showed version 1.37.116 as installed in the Pop!_Shop but neither the ‘Install’ or ‘Open’ buttons did anything so I ran sudo apt purge brave-browser and rebooted again and then reinstalled Brave from the Pop!_Shop widget. Something strange going on here! When I looked at the Pop!_Shop widget, it shows their current version as 1.37.116 (April 15 2022) and shows it as ‘ installed’ but that doesn’t agree with the information taken directly from the browsers ‘ About Brave’ page that I copied into my original post (showing Version 1.15.76). I also have Firefox installed, with essentially the same extensions, and it functions normally. ![]() Error: No tab url specified”, source: chrome-extension://mnojpmjdmbbfmejpflffifhffcmidifd/out/brave_extension_ (1)ĭisplaying a new one every time the browser page changes. While the browser is in use, messages are displayed on the command line stating: “: Can’t request shields panel data. If browser is opened from the command line with “brave-browser -no-sandbox”, the browser loads as expected with the warning: “ You are using an unsupported command-line flag: -no-sandbox. Since you have an AMD64 machine, you can run this modified instruction to fix the problem:Įcho “deb stable main”|sudo tee /etc/apt//brave-browser-release.After upgrading to the latest LTS version of Pop!OS (22.04) from the previous LTS (21.10), Brave browser won’t load any pages and reports “Error code 159” message boxes also appear at the upper-right of the window sequentially detailing one-by-one that ALL installed extensions have crashed.Īttempt to open browser on current Pop!OS 22.04LTSīrowser should open and function normally ![]() But this isn’t ideal for AMD64 users because it leads to the problem you’re seeing. The upside for Brave is that identical instructions will work on AMD64 and ARM machines. That’s why the instructions omit arch=amd64 when they suggest adding a. The instructions provided by Brave Browser for installing on Ubuntu try to accommodate every architecture. You can add arch=amd64 to your brave-browser-release.list file. This error message can be safely ignored or you can try one of the following fixes: This error message is indicating that the repository “ stable InRelease” does not support the i386 architecture, and as a result, the “main/binary-i386/Packages” file is being skipped during the update process. As info, this SO article seemed to have the fix for me.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |