Mozilla’s privacy-heavy browser is flatlining but still crucial to future of the web.
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Could you tell me more?No sympathy for Eich. The man voted for and funded efforts to criminalize many of his own employees over immutable characteristics. If he was a racial Segregationist I doubt he'd have as many defenders, but the two are morally equivalent.
This so much!Exactly. Anyone blaming Firefox's decline on "SJWs" at the foundation is missing the mark. For me:Downvotes? Someone doesn't like facts?
You’re not being downvoted for the factual part of your comment (that Mozilla have alienated users with unwanted changes). You’re being downvoted for the stupid political axe-grinding you insisted on mixing in.
It used to be EXTREMELY personalized and personalizable, right out of the box, even without extensions. Mozilla has systematically REMOVED FUNCTIONALITY from the browser, and I'm not talking about switching from XUL. Personally I don't care if XUL ever comes back. I don't even use many extensions, mostly just uBlock.“Once lost, users hardly come back until there's a compelling reason, and what would that compelling reason be?” says Bart Willemsen, a VP analyst focusing on privacy at Gartner. Willemsen says he has been a Firefox user since its earliest days. “I think Firefox really has a challenge to find a unique position—not only in marketing statements, but in their absolute product—and go in one direction,” he says.
For Deckelmann, making Firefox more personalized is key. She says this includes trying to increase the browser’s functionality to fit in with people being online more. “It’s almost impossible now for people to manage all this information,” Deckelmann says.
A couple of versions ago they took out right-click for image properties! a basic function of browsing since Netscape Navigator and didn't add it back until two more releases. They took away my compact view mode. They foisted less powerful menus on me and removed configurable settings from about:config, the single most powerful customization feature of the core browser.
They keep chasing a new Chrome-like feature or look while killing things I use regularly. I don't want that shit. I want the old customizable feature-rich Firefox experience I had back in the 2.0 days.
So many users eject after each interface overhaul or silent removal of basic functionality and Firefox's trademark customizability. Yet they kept doing it. Madness.
No.Firefox is likely to continue looking for ways to keep personalizing people’s online browsing.
Have you not tried Palemoon? I use that on Linux and Windows. It's pretty much Firefox from 10 years ago as far as the GUI is concerned.As a desktop Linux user, the thought of Firefox going away is frightening.
Putting aside Mozilla's own lack of direction, what really perplexes me is why there's so many projects dedicated to fluff like desktop environments but almost zero motivation for a good browser/fork. RedHat/IBM seem to only care about the cloud, so there's no hope for Epiphany anymore. Canonical is busy trying to snapify everything to ensure we turn geriatric while waiting for snap packages to load. System76 wants to build yet-another-gnome-alternative instead of doing sensible like donating to the Librewolf project.
Seriously, if/when Firefox dies (they've started working with Satan/Meta, so it's pretty close I reckon), I'll probably just ditch desktop Linux for home use and move to iPadOS (personally not a fan of MacOS, which I use at work) and Safari or something, because the only alternatives on Linux at that point will be reskinned Chrome alternatives like Brave, ugh.
Isn't that default. At least Falkon still does thatWhere can I get a browser that allows tabs under the address bar? This can be done in FF (what I use now), but there is this continual war between the developers and users on this feature.
Brendan Eich worked at Netscape and then co-founded Mozilla, doing a lot of the fundamental technology like the javascript rendering engines and becoming first a member of the Board, then filling C-level offices. Eventually he was appointed CEO of Mozilla, but faced pushback from Mozilla employees and contributors because it was revealed he'd donated money to support Proposition 8 and its backers, which was a measure to ban same-sex marriages in California. Since several Moz employees and contributors were LBTQ+, he was essentially pushing politics that would criminalize their relationships and relegate them to second-class citizens. When he didn't change his stance on SSM, he decided to step down.Could you tell me more?No sympathy for Eich. The man voted for and funded efforts to criminalize many of his own employees over immutable characteristics. If he was a racial Segregationist I doubt he'd have as many defenders, but the two are morally equivalent.
Who is Eich?
I've totally missed that story, probably.
From Wikipedia, meanwhile the CEO:
"In 2018 she received a total of $2,458,350 in compensation from Mozilla, which represents a 400% payrise since 2008"
"By 2020, her salary had risen to over $3 million."
Completely agree. Practically every version it's back to https://www.userchrome.org to figure out how to change the css to get it sort of back to what I had before. It's never perfect but it helps a little.It used to be EXTREMELY personalized and personalizable, right out of the box, even without extensions. Mozilla has systematically REMOVED FUNCTIONALITY from the browser, and I'm not talking about switching from XUL. Personally I don't care if XUL ever comes back. I don't even use many extensions, mostly just uBlock.
A couple of versions ago they took out right-click for image properties! a basic function of browsing since Netscape Navigator and didn't add it back until two more releases. They took away my compact view mode. They foisted less powerful menus on me and removed configurable settings from about:config, the single most powerful customization feature of the core browser.
They keep chasing a new Chrome-like feature or look while killing things I use regularly. I don't want that shit. I want the old customizable feature-rich Firefox experience I had back in the 2.0 days.
So many users eject after each interface overhaul or silent removal of basic functionality and Firefox's trademark customizability. Yet they kept doing it. Madness.
Chromium is not de Googled. It has all the same nonsense as Google, just without the official support and proprietary codecs. It takes quite a bit of effort to clean ChromiumIn my own experience, I prefer Brave. It's a de-Googled Chrome.
Have you heard about Chromium?
I've been using Firefox before it even was version 1.x, and I still am. There was a certain time when multithreading became increasingly important, and Firefox took quite long to adapt (I think around 2012...2014). But it has. It is quick, reliable, it can be extended the way I want, and I can really only recommend it to others as the better alternative. Even Mac users (I use it there, too) should think of it as the better alternative to Safari, which is nowadays called "the IE of Apple".
I personally also cannot trust a browser that is made by an ad and search giant. That is too many interests put into one place.
I donate to Mozilla on a regular basis. You don't need to do this, but you should really try out Firefox - maybe even again, if you dropped it some time ago.
Sad.It used to be EXTREMELY personalized and personalizable, right out of the box, even without extensions. Mozilla has systematically REMOVED FUNCTIONALITY from the browser, and I'm not talking about switching from XUL. Personally I don't care if XUL ever comes back. I don't even use many extensions, mostly just uBlock.
A couple of versions ago they took out right-click for image properties! a basic function of browsing since Netscape Navigator and didn't add it back until two more releases. They took away my compact view mode. They foisted less powerful menus on me and removed configurable settings from about:config, the single most powerful customization feature of the core browser.
They keep chasing a new Chrome-like feature or look while killing things I use regularly. I don't want that shit. I want the old customizable feature-rich Firefox experience I had back in the 2.0 days.
So many users eject after each interface overhaul or silent removal of basic functionality and Firefox's trademark customizability. Yet they kept doing it. Madness.
This.
I used Firefox since back when it was known as Phoenix. It was my primary browser for many years, but I ended up dropping it back when they launched the "Australis" makeover. I didn't like the look of it as it was too similar to Chrome, but my biggest beef was just how much customisability they removed. That's been one of my constant criticisms ever since.
Firefox's USP used to be the flexibility and customisability that it had. Sadly, Mozilla seems to be determined to remove as much of this as possible, and hence for me one of the biggest reasons to use it has been steadily eroded. These days I typically use Pale Moon for most things (a Firefox fork that retains much of the customisability Mozilla removed), with Vivaldi being used for certain sites that don't play well with Pale Moon.
From time to time, I do try Firefox again, but it just doesn't have enough to tempt me back. Maybe this may change? I hope so as the web does need none-Chromium browsers.
Yes. Click the lock icon next to the URL bar, then two more clicks and you get the Page Info window, then Permissions tab. Yes, it's convoluted. For the convenience of a one-click bar icon, use extensions (I use YesScript). To disable JS globally, there's a "hidden" option in about:config, can't find a non-hidden setting right now.I recently switched from Safari to FF on my desktop Mac for the extensions, but I miss the easy access to certain functions that I had in Safari. For example, is there an easy way to toggle Javascript in FF? Other than that, no major issues.
Could you tell me more?
Who is Eich?
I've totally missed that story, probably.
Eich co-founded Mozilla in 1998, which maintained the Mozilla web-browser, the descendant to Netscape and alternative to Internet Explorer.
The Mozilla foundation created Firefox in 2002.
In 2014, it transpired that Eich had made $3,100 in donations in 2008 to political causes which the Social Justice Warriors did not approve of. Eich was demonized by the Social Justice Warrior employees and Board of Director Members, and ostracised.
Are you on Android? iOS has had swipe down to reload for quite a while now.I use Firefox on all of my devices. No issues at all with performance or usability.
I use it too (containers are really nice for separating things) but mobile one doesn't have swipe down to reload and it's driving me crazy.
Honestly it's really difficult to recommend FF over vivaldi to anyone. FF is byzantine as fuck and everything needs some random add-on (we all know the security of many of those).
I would love to have vivaldi like browser based on FF. Something where I don't need bunch of security nightmares in order to use it and it accepts that different people work in different ways, unlike mozilla that is our way or highway.
Settings -> Homepage -> Opening Screen: Last tab. That option has been there since the beginning.I have always tried to support Firefox just to have diversity in the ecosystem. I still use it regularly on desktop but had to remove it for iOS due to recent UI changes that were driving me crazy. Specifically their choice to open a new tab every time I opened the app with no option to change the behavior back to opening to my last used tab (which is what I want my browser to do). I am now using Edge but wish FF had just left things alone and focused on improved performance and reliability instead of useless UI changes.
i've always used FF. but some of their UI decisions are just baffling.
what they did to the new tab page with the last UI update is truly confusing. they've always had a big edit control in the middle of the page, which acts as a search box. and i'd grown accustomed to using that, instead of the little search box on the toolbar. and i HATE using the URL control as a search because those are two separate functions. the combined URL and search control is why i hate Chrome, in fact.
anyway, they still have the search box on the new tab page, but when you start typing in it, focus immediately jumps to the URL bar and you end up typing in there, instead.
so they've created this new fake edit control that looks exactly like every edit control since the beginning of time, but behaves unlike any control that has ever existed. and why? because they want you to use the URL bar for search. why not just remove that edit control? why turn it into this cludgy fake thing that only infuriates me?
other than that...fine browser.
Nonsense removedDownvotes? Someone doesn't like facts?
You’re not being downvoted for the factual part of your comment (that Mozilla have alienated users with unwanted changes). You’re being downvoted for the stupid political axe-grinding you insisted on mixing in.
Eich also inflicted JavaScript on the world. After that atrocity, he ought to consider himself lucky to be allowed to draw breath.
In my own experience, I prefer Brave. It's a de-Googled Chrome.
In my own experience, I prefer Brave. It's a de-Googled Chrome.
There's also Chromium, which is a de-Googled Chrome without changing the interface. I like Brave as well, but some people don't like change, and Chromium give them the exact same interface as Google's official Chrome browser without the built-in spying and personal data mining.
"Eich was demonized" for voting to remove rights from minorities which he thought they didn't deserve the way he did, yes.
California Proposition 8 received 7,001,084 yes votes and 6,401,482 noes.
Brendan Eich donated $1,000 against Proposition 8 and was presumably one of the 6,401,482 Californians who voted no.
For this, he was cancelled.
One easy way to donate something to Mozilla, even if you do not use it, is to use amazon smile, and set the donations to Mozilla Foundation.
This exists now. It’s a pain to use though compared to what Google provides. Or was. I haven’t had time to dig back into it after it went out of “beta”While I understand why a lot of consumers have dropped Firefox for Chrome as Android took off, I think there's another really big reason Chrome is so dominant. They provide .admx files which allows businesses with a Windows ADDS environment to manage Chrome and it's configuration in a very granular way. I remember pushing it hard as a sysadmin because it was a realistic alternate to IE we could centrally manage. That's the sort of thing that, because of privacy concerns nowadays, Mozilla could use to displace significant market share with privacy-conscious businesses. There needs to be a comparable "Firefox for Work" sort of option that can be centrally managed.
Damned if they did, and damned if they didn't. Like you, I ditched FF when they ditched XUL, making all the addons I used obsolete. There ceased to be any compelling reason to use it. But, there is no doubt that XUL was a security nightmare. They ditched it for the right reasons, but it also took away everything that made Firefox unique. Not sure if it's even possible to for them to turn it around at this point. Still, I wish them the best.I played with Phoenix and Firebird before the final name change (and used Netscape before that). I used Firefox almost exclusively from the day it launched until the day that Mozilla abandoned XUL and almost every other feature that let users decide what they wanted to do with their browser and how they wanted it to look (version somewhere in the 50s?).
Mozilla didn't just shoot themselves in the foot; they pretty much cut their legs off at the knees. Users didn't abandon Firefox so much as Mozilla abandoned Firefox users first. Mozilla decided that what its users wanted didn't matter anymore, so we left.
Eich also inflicted JavaScript on the world. After that atrocity, he ought to consider himself lucky to be allowed to draw breath.
I do not agree. JavaScript may not be the best language in the world, but it's perfectly useable and allows one to do a lot of extremely nice and useful stuff in the browser. The fact that there are a lot of developers who insist on writing horribly slow, bloated code with it isn't the language's fault: they'd still write slow and bloated code, even if they had to switch to something else.