Firefox 59, 'By Far the Biggest Update Since Firefox 1.0', Arrives With Faster Page Loads and Improved Private Browsing (venturebeat.com) 104
An anonymous reader shares a VentureBeat report: Mozilla today launched Firefox 59 for Windows, Mac, Linux, and Android. The release builds on Firefox Quantum, which the company calls "by far the biggest update since Firefox 1.0 in 2004." Version 59 brings faster page load times, private browsing mode that strips path information, and Android Assist. In related news, Mozilla is giving Amazon Fire TV owners a new design later this week that lets them save their preferred websites by pinning them to the Firefox home screen. Enterprise users also have something to look forward to: On Wednesday, Firefox Quantum for Enterprise is entering the beta phase. Firefox 59 for the desktop is available for download now on Firefox.com, and all existing users should be able to upgrade to it automatically. As always, the Android version is trickling out slowly on Google Play.
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Which addons do you actually need, that aren't available in FF57+?
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I gave up and went to 56 after getting warnings from Google apps saying my browser version was no longer supported. 56 is the last version to support XUL addons, so my entire browser hasn't gone to the new shit UI and shit functionality, but it's still new enough to be fully supported.
I don't know what I'll do when 56 gets too old or a severe security issue is discovered and Mozilla refuses to backport the fix. Honestly I'm hoping something better has come along by then - perhaps a real fork of Firefox th
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I'm not sure about the future for Web Extensions in Pale Moon. I know they are working on a move to UXP (Unified XUL Platform) which possibly includes Web Extension support? It's worth a look for sure.
Not what the article said (Score:5, Informative)
The headline says Firefox 59 is the "biggest update since Firefox 1". But it is Firefox Quantum which is described that way, not 59. Could someone please RTFA.
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I tried to read it but FF59 was taking too long, so I went ahead and posted the summary as-is
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The headline says Firefox 59 is the "biggest update since Firefox 1". But it is Firefox Quantum which is described that way, not 59. Could someone please RTFA.
The article says 59 builds on quantum. Did you skim the article?
The headline and the summary disagree (Score:3)
The headline says 59 is "biggest", while the summary says 59 builds on Quantum (that is, 57), and Quantum is "biggest".
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> Disabling Javascript across the board just breaks most websites.
No, not those I care about (save very few).
Thing is, all web "designers" now assume every browser "does" javascript because browser "vendors" (and Mozilla is among the worst here) have been nudging users into just giving in.
This is the Internet equivalent of dumping garbage on the streets, to the detriment of all. What we get is bitcoin mining "plugins", and Meltdown deployment via Javascript in the browser (sandboxing? HA! "next time we g
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Then use NoScript, as someone said above. Or disable javascript in the dev tools.
But you're going to keep crying like the little girl you are.
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> Then use NoScript, as someone said above. Or disable javascript in the dev tools.
NoScript under quantum has been a shitshow. Crippled and clumsy compared to prior versions.
> But you're going to keep crying like the little girl you are.
FFS. Javascript has been a necessary component of every single browser exploit for well over a decade now. There is nothing even remotely childish about wanting vastly better control over the #1 security bottleneck on the internet.
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Disabling Javascript across the board just breaks most websites. This is why the feature is gone. You should use the NoScript [mozilla.org] add-on to Firefox instead (It blocks more than Javascript, too!)
Unfortunately, the new redesigned Noscript has a fucking awful interface. So much worse than the old one.
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It's not as bad as it was in the first days of the 10.0 release. I actually had scripts fully enabled for a few days before I realized I had it configured wrong. But I agree it still needs work, and is missing a bunch of options 5.0 had which improved privacy and security.
Thanks Mozilla Team (Score:2, Insightful)
Firefox is still the only browser I trust. Keep up the great work!
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Firefox is still the only browser I trust.
Well there's IE, Chrome, and Opera. Assuming of course that you trust MS, Google, and the Chinese.
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And how much of that is extensions that Google pulled out of their ass in the last year that aren't actually part of the spec?
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Pulling a Microsoft, eh?
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FYI: I think the parent used https://html5test.com/ [html5test.com]
Donation incoming. (Score:4, Informative)
Time to donate $59 toward the Pale Moon project.
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If $59 is too much, then cut it in half, or if that's too much, just do $5.90, or figure out your own rubric if you want to donate similar to how I do.
This is my third donation using this technique.
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Another Update I do not have to suffer, thanks to Firefox ESR.
No need to go to some fork (I am not saying PaleMoon is bad, just that it is a fork).
If you use your browser for WORK, just let the desktop guys be the gamma testers, and enjoy full compatibility and support from your web-tools, plug-ins, iLO tools from the big players (Oracle, Huawei, Cisco, HPE, Lenovo, Dell, SAP, etc.).
Of course, the fact that Palemoon, safari, chrome, etc are not supported by the big enterprise guys does not reflect on the qu
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After two or three of such changes, the last one was ultimately my show stopper, and Firefox was no longer a viable option. It happened to others before my switch, and it has happened to others after my switch. At some point, they may finally change something you care enough about to abandon.
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Well sure, Firefox lets you quickly reopen closed tabs, it's not going to free memory that quickly.
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"about:memory" and press minimize memory usage button.
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Many of mine did not. For that matter, neither did any of my UI tweaks.
Anyway, since I'm everybody, clearly the update is unusable.
Re: get back to me when all of my addons work (Score:2)
I have used only three addons, two of them stopped working after the update and the authors say that they can't port them. These two were the only reason to keep using Firefox, so I simply have switched to Opera. No drama, just facts.
Re: get back to me when all of my addons work (Score:4, Insightful)
I simply have switched to Opera
So.. you switched to a browser with WebExtensions based add-ons? Might as well have keep using Firefox.
Re: get back to me when all of my addons work (Score:2)
Opera is faster and several web extensions that were poor substitutes for the addons I have used previously didn't work with Firefox at all because apparently the Firefox implementation of web extensions is only partially compatible to Chrome and Opera.
Re:get back to me when all of my addons work (Score:4, Interesting)
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theweatherelectic is a paid promoter.
What a bizarre conspiracy theory.
All of yours work? Well half of mine do not work and do not have equivalents.
Then guess what, kid: your experience is not universal. It's a much simpler explanation than the fantasy world you've constructed for yourself.
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I've offered extensive justification
Yes, "justification" is exactly the word. No proof, no actual evidence, just rumor and innuendo. Just self-reinforcing delusion. Your claims are bizarre.
Just think about what you're saying logically. You're claiming that Mozilla pays people to go "undercover", on Slashdot of all places, to comment on Firefox. I think you're dramatically overstating the importance of Slashdot in the scheme of things. And why would Mozilla do that? The way they promote Firefox is through blog posts, media interviews, and g
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Even your denial
Ah, belief perseverance [wikipedia.org]. I understand.
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Jesus christ on a horse, shut the fuck up already.
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That would be great. Right now if you want to make a kiosk device, the only browser that has enterprise long-term support is IE11. Chrome and FF don't have any kind of enterprise support. And Microsoft doesn't support Edge in their long-term support branch. If you purchase their embedded Windows or server Windows, it doesn't have Edge and there is no installer to add it.
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Extensions killed the beast (Score:4, Interesting)
I have been using Firefox since when it was only part of mozilla, but I have since moved to Waterfox, because I have not been able to replace my old extensions. And the newer version of my old extensions, e.g. noscript, really slow down the new firefox browser.
https://www.waterfoxproject.or... [waterfoxproject.org]
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I myself switched over to Pale Moon [palemoon.org] once Firefox started killing off features and pretending to be Chrome.
I would recommend you ditch NoScript and check out uMatrix [github.com]. It is a full, and better (and without the whole AdBlock controversy) replacement to NoScript. As well as CookieMonster, and other resource blockers, allowing control over loading of not just JS/Cookies but also CSS, images, media, and more.
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If you use uMatrix you should combine with uBlock, since uBlock provides useful replacement scripts for some websites so they keep working even when their shitty scripts are blocked.
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I would recommend you ditch NoScript and check out uMatrix
The latest versions of uMatrix [mozilla.org] are WebExtensions based. I imagine they'll get bored with maintaining the XUL version eventually and stop development on it.
Re: No thanks, I'll stick with Firefox ESR (Score:1)
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Still... (Score:1)
Firefox Private Browsing (Score:3)
Not sure if a bug... (Score:2)
In version 58 and all prior versions you could type "about:" in the URL window to quickly determine which version you were running. In 59, this feature is no longer available, however you can still type "about:ram" to check RAM usage.
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p.s. FYI: "about:ram" doesn't work
Use about:memory. There's also about:support and about:mozilla.
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This. The entire reason firefox ditches the broken old add on implementation is because it's full of security holes.
Making a fork to keep using the a vulnerable API is stupid.
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Meanwhile in the real world where people don't use a whole 3 addons and are actually capable of testing the new Fireshit to see what a shitpile in terms of addons it is, half the addon replacements come with stripped down addons that are shadows of their former selves - useless, a quarter can't be ported because new system doesn't allow deeper interaction between Fireshit and the OS like Open With because "muh security" (as if power users give a shit), and the leftover quarter barely works with some minor s
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Try again, this time without the pointless name-calling.
Come on, I know you can do it.
Re:Pale Moon Browser 27.8.1 has been released (Score:4, Funny)
Bleh... Seamonkey (the real Netscape) still has all of you beat, even (especially) after all these years. We should celebrate its stability, at least in its user interface.
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Re:Pale Moon Browser 27.8.1 has been released (Score:4, Interesting)
PaleMoon is alas no longer an option at work, as it won't work on Enterprise Linux 6 anymore, the still supported and last systemd free major OS family.
And building it on my gentoo machine at home is not an option either, as I have to install and switch to old gcc 4.9 compilers just to get it to build.
Seamonkey is no problem building, but alas, there are a few sites it doesn't work with. Like the Kinja empire and BofA.
So Firefox it is, at least for now.