I do this with a script to make the cache tiny and it works great. Its official website says that the Brave browser is three times faster than Google Chrome. It has every feature that you expect from a web browsing application. Once you’ve written that in Script Editor, save it, then also save it as an Application some place you’ll remember, then go to that folder and drag the new Application to your Dock and use it to launch Brave instead of clicking Brave’s icon (every time). Brave Browser is one of the popular web browsers available for Windows, Linux, Mac, and Android operating systems. Also, I use Nightly, so if I left that word in the app name by mistake, just omit/delete it. If you copy and paste, make sure no stray formatting codes have been included. I tried that and it didn’t throw an error, but, again, don’t know if it worked, either. Open -a 'Brave Browser.app' -args -disable-component-update -check-for-update-interval=630720000 You could do both commands by adding one after the other like this: Tell application "Brave Browser" to activate The script would look like this (use Script Editor - should be in /Applications/Utilities): if application "Brave Browser" is running thenĭo shell script "open -a '/Applications/Brave Browser.app' -args -disable-component-update" Open -a 'Brave Browser.app' -args -disable-component-update Open -a 'Brave Browser.app' -args -check-for-update-interval=630720000 (that’s 20 years expressed in seconds) or What I’d suggest is writing a tiny AppleScript to issue the command you want to try: I tried using both (20 years in seconds for the first) and they didn’t return an error, but I don’t know that they worked, either.
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