Pale Moon 27.9.4 web browser (64-bit): download Intel Mac OS X 10.7 and above InterWeb web browser: download and info SpiderWeb browser and e-mail client: info and download PowerPC Linux (32-bit) Ubuntu 16.04 / Debian 10 / Fienix Lubuntu 12.04 & 16.04 Remix (live CD / DVD + installer): info and download Debian Sid Remix: Info and download. Leopard WebKit is a nightly channel build of WebKit for Macs running Mac OS X 10.5. It is the only PowerPC browser to fully support H.264 and Grooveshark Mobile.
A little birdie left a comment saying there was an unofficial Tor Browser Bundle for Tiger and Leopard at sourceforge.net/projects/osxpowerpcpackages. Given that I wrote a long torturous post about how to use Tor without the bundle since Tor officially dropped PowerPC, I naturally wanted to check this out.
'At last a browser that works with Mac PPC G4' 'At last a browser that works with Mac PPC G4' scotjimland-2008 January 30, 2011 /.
So I downloaded it and it turns out it's no joke. It really is the Tor Browser Bundle for PowerPC. From the ReadMe:
The packages in this directory are UNOFFICIAL builds of the Tor Browser Bundle for Mac OS X Tiger (10.4) and Leopard (10.5), PowerPC architecture. Optimized builds are available for the different PowerPC versions, namely, the G3, G4 (7450) and G5.As said, it's a bit outdated so it's more proof of concept, but everything works. It all comes in one app bundle, and inside it are Vidalia and Firefox, with Firefox having its own profile in TorBrowser.app/Library/Application Support/, so you can run this side-by-side with TenFourFox with no problems.
The bundle is based on the official Tor Browser Bundle with changes to make it work on older Mac OS X versions and the PowerPC architecture. Most notably, Qt is downgraded to the last Mac OS X 10.4 compatible version (4.7.4) and Firefox is patched with suitable parts from the TenFourFox changeset.
Note that the 2.3.25-15 bundle version is already outdated. More current version based on Tor Browser Bundle 3.5 is in the works.
It also sets your user agent to the default Tor user agent, has private browsing enabled, and sets
network.proxy.socks_remote_dns to 'true,' so all your bases are covered. It comes with two add-ons, HTTPS Everywhere and NoScript. NoScript is set to allow scripts by default, so you want to click the 'Forbid Scripts' option.Basically all you need to do is start the application, watch Vidalia establish a connection until Firefox opens to a page announcing you're browsing anonymously. Easy like it's supposed to be.