Microsoft may have told app developers “Don’t call it Metro,” but the latest version of Mozilla’s browser for Windows 8 is called the “Firefox Metro Preview.” The name is fitting in all senses.
It’s fitting because Mozilla has adopted the used-to-be-called-Metro design style with an attractive overhaul of the browser’s user interface. This is something Google did not do with Chrome. While there is a version of Chrome for Metro, it looks almost exactly like the desktop version, for better or worse.
The name “Firefox Metro Preview” is also fitting because “preview,” if anything, is a polite word for this early state of the application. While both Microsoft and Google have Metro-style browsers in functional shape, Mozilla’s current schedule will keep the Metro version of its browser in beta for some time after the Windows 8 release on Oct. 26.
I installed the Firefox Metro Preview for Windows 8 RTM today on a Samsung Series 7 tablet with a 1.6GHz Intel Core i5 processor, 4GB of RAM, and an SSD drive. It’s probably too early to run benchmarks on the browser—but I did it anyway. Firefox actually beat IE10 in the Google Octane JavaScript benchmark, but lost in SunSpider, and simply could not complete the Peacekeeper HTML5 test.
The benchmarks show some promise, and the browser’s existing features work pretty well. Everything it can do, it does quickly and smoothly. But there are lots of missing pieces, as noted by Firefox developer Brian Bondy in his blog. There is no panning and zooming. Scrolling is possible with touch, and a keyboard, but not with a mouse scroll wheel.
Flash and add-ons are both disabled for now. “Although we have plans for Flash support, the preview currently has it disabled,” Bondy wrote. “You can add support for windowless plugins by setting plugin.disable to false in about:config. As previously mentioned, for the Metro environment only, even in the initial release, we will not have add-ons enabled. We will eventually add support for add-ons through the add-on SDK.”

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