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Malevolence

Mozilla Firefox Official Thread

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Version 10.0 is up. Some minor interface changes, too.

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Just auto-updated. What interface changes? Looks exactly the same to me.

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Well, the Forward button will no longer appear if there's nothing to return to.

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Well the point is its another major version jump with a few minor insignificant changes or additions.

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Well I auto-updated the portable version of Firefox anyway, and winds up seeing the same thing; just bug fixes.

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Well, the Forward button will no longer appear if there's nothing to return to.

I call bull****. I have 10.0 and it's still there at all times. Then again, I change my layout quite a bit...

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Firefox 11 is now released as assumed 4.7 :thumbsdown:

Release notes: http://www.mozilla.o...0/releasenotes/

 

Still they have done nothing to create crash protection on javascript, and Google Chrome needs crash protection on Flash.

Edited by zocom7

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Its been Firefox 11 for awhile now.

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Now updating Firefox 12.0, which has been released not long ago. :mellow:

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I like Firefox, always have. But screw Mozilla and their dumb ass version numbering system.

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I am thinking that this thread will soon be bigger than the pic-of-the-day one!

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I am thinking that this thread will soon be bigger than the pic-of-the-day one!

 

This thread never ends until Mozilla's dominance is over.

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This thread never ends until Mozilla's dominance is over.

Now what's with this? FireFox is fine, the only rant people have is the version numbering Mozilla is giving over minor changes.

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I thought this was interesting in regards to Firefox 12 and UAC in Windows 7 and Vista....

 

Firefox skirts Windows security feature to make silent updates happen

 

Firefox 12, set to release Tuesday, sidesteps Windows' UAC

 

Computerworld - Mozilla will ship Firefox 12 tomorrow with a key component of its years-long silent update project.

 

Firefox 12, which got the green light from Mozilla last week, is slated to release on Tuesday, April 24.

 

Among the changes to Firefox 12, the most noticeable to Windows users will be the disappearance of the UAC, or "user account control," prompt on Vista and Windows 7 during updates.

 

UAC is a security feature introduced in Vista -- and in a less-intrusive form, tucked into Windows 7, too -- that requires users to agree to most program installations.

 

Firefox 12 will be the first edition from the open-source developer that sidesteps UAC.

 

"[uAC] makes things like automated software updates hard to do without user interaction," Brian Bondy, a Firefox platform engineer, wrote in a March blog post. "If we don't have access to write into Program Files to perform an update, then we have to ask for elevated permissions. We ask for elevated permissions today when applying updates."

 

In effect, UAC stymies no-user-action-required updates, or "silent updates." UAC-bypass has been one of the five pieces in Firefox's project to introduce silent updates, which is nearing completion but won't wrap up until this summer.

 

Firefox skips UAC by substituting a Mozilla-created Windows service for the traditional installation process.

 

Google's Chrome, which has featured silent updating since its 2008 debut, installs its code in the user's folder within Windows to avoid UAC. Mozilla rejected that route.

 

"We chose not to because it can be an administrative headache for some people who manage updates themselves and have to maintain an installation for every user," Bondy wrote.

 

Mozilla has said that sidestepping UAC makes sense.

 

"The repeated prompting is unnecessary because the first time that you accept the prompt you indicate that you put your trust in Firefox," the company said in a February blog post on silent updating. "After you have granted Firefox permission to update it should continue to be able to update future versions of Firefox without prompting you again."

 

The final component of silent updating, responsible for launching and completing the update entirely in the background, will land in Firefox 13, scheduled to ship June 5, or Firefox 14, set to ship July 17.

 

Mozilla has been working on silent updating for nearly two years. At one point, it thought it could add the feature to Firefox 4, which shipped in March 2011, but abandoned work when that version was delayed several times for other reasons. Late last year, it said it was shooting for silent updating in Firefox 10, which debuted in January. Those plans were also scrapped.

 

Implementing silent updating would make Firefox only the third browser to offer the feature, after Chrome and Microsoft's Internet Explorer (IE).

 

Last December, Microsoft jumped on the silent update bandwagon when it announced it would automatically upgrade IE to the newest browser suitable for each version of Windows. Before the new practice began in January 2012, Microsoft had asked users for their permission before upgrading IE from one version to the next, even if Windows' automatic update service was enabled.

 

IE's automatic upgrading kicked off in Brazil and Australia only, but Microsoft plans to expand the practice worldwide this year.

 

Also tomorrow, Mozilla will push Firefox 3.6 into retirement. The company has been dunning users with pleas to upgrade for weeks, and will take the unusual step of automatically upgrading version 3.6 to Firefox 12 after the latter's release.

 

According to Web metrics company Net Applications, Firefox 3.6 accounted for 13% of all copies of Firefox used last month, down from 79% one year earlier.

 

http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9226463/Firefox_skirts_Windows_security_feature_to_make_silent_updates_happen

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If anything I would DISABLE updates for Mozilla, seems every other day that damn update popup appears.

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First to version, 100.0 wins? :P

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If anything I would DISABLE updates for Mozilla, seems every other day that damn update popup appears.

I never notice FF updating, unless I restart my browser for example.

Well yeah. They gotta keep up with Google's rapid versioning ****.

They don't have to, they just want to :/

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I installed a new addon and Firefox decided to update to version 13. I didn't ask for that but nothing broke so I guess I can deal with it.

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The scrolling speed in Firefox 13 is outrageous.

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Firefox continues to be overrated these days with no signs of a new and different interface at this point of time.

 

This still feels like the Firefox 4.0 interface (now a Firefox 4.5 with a lot a new enhancements).

 

As for the new version, I auto-updated once more.

Edited by zocom7

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The scrolling speed in Firefox 13 is outrageous.

Agreed. Earlier on, FireFox deliberately crashed on me because it wanted to auto-update. After update, the first thing I noticed was the weird scrolling. Sigh. Why fix something when it isn't broken?

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