Can Firefox Be Saved? (zdnet.com) 318
"Even with another infusion of cash from Google, you have to wonder just how long Firefox will survive as a viable, mainstream web browser," argues ZDNet contributing editor Steven J. Vaughan-Nichols:
I've been using Mozilla's Firefox browser since it was still in beta. In 2004, for a while, it was my favorite web browser. Not because it was open-source, but because it was so much better and more secure than Internet Explorer. That was then. This is now. Firefox is in real danger of dying off...
Mozilla and Firefox still produced important work. You need to look no further than the JavaScript, Rust, and WebAssembly languages. They were also champions of security and privacy. Projects such as embracing DNS-over-HTTPS (DoH) and overall security improvements were great, but users didn't care. With the arrival of Google's Chrome browser, users turned from Firefox to Chrome as their favorite browser...
Firefox is on its way to irrelevance. Making matters even worse, Mozilla's just had its second round of layoffs... As technology writer Matthew MacDonald put it, "Mozilla "." Firefox's security and development teams have also been hard hit. This is bad. In January. Mitchell Baker, Mozilla Corporation CEO and Mozilla Foundation chairperson, said it let people go because of declining interest in Firefox, and thus reduced earnings, and that Mozilla was looking for more revenue from "sources outside of search" but "this did not happen." It still isn't happening. According to Mozilla's latest annual report, the majority of its revenue is still generated from global browser search partnerships. This includes the deal negotiated with Google in 2017... Baker assured onlookers that Mozilla would "ship new products faster and develop new revenue streams." These include its bookmarking app Pocket; its virtual rooms Hubs; and its $4.99-a-month Firefox VPN. Excuse me if I don't buy any of these new revenue sources....
Firefox will live on in one way or the other. It's open source after all. But Firefox as an important browser, or Mozilla as a significant open-source developer hub? No. I can't see it. Those days are done. Firefox is officially on my endangered species list.
Technology writer Matthew MacDonald ended his Medium essay on a more hopeful note. "If you have the skills and time, the best possible support is to join the Mozilla community and contribute to their code base."
Mozilla and Firefox still produced important work. You need to look no further than the JavaScript, Rust, and WebAssembly languages. They were also champions of security and privacy. Projects such as embracing DNS-over-HTTPS (DoH) and overall security improvements were great, but users didn't care. With the arrival of Google's Chrome browser, users turned from Firefox to Chrome as their favorite browser...
Firefox is on its way to irrelevance. Making matters even worse, Mozilla's just had its second round of layoffs... As technology writer Matthew MacDonald put it, "Mozilla "." Firefox's security and development teams have also been hard hit. This is bad. In January. Mitchell Baker, Mozilla Corporation CEO and Mozilla Foundation chairperson, said it let people go because of declining interest in Firefox, and thus reduced earnings, and that Mozilla was looking for more revenue from "sources outside of search" but "this did not happen." It still isn't happening. According to Mozilla's latest annual report, the majority of its revenue is still generated from global browser search partnerships. This includes the deal negotiated with Google in 2017... Baker assured onlookers that Mozilla would "ship new products faster and develop new revenue streams." These include its bookmarking app Pocket; its virtual rooms Hubs; and its $4.99-a-month Firefox VPN. Excuse me if I don't buy any of these new revenue sources....
Firefox will live on in one way or the other. It's open source after all. But Firefox as an important browser, or Mozilla as a significant open-source developer hub? No. I can't see it. Those days are done. Firefox is officially on my endangered species list.
Technology writer Matthew MacDonald ended his Medium essay on a more hopeful note. "If you have the skills and time, the best possible support is to join the Mozilla community and contribute to their code base."
I still love Firefox (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't get why the Mozilla Foundation doesn't simply maintain Firefox with incremental improvements and stop trying new silly products. Its open source - we don't care what percentage of users use it - we care about having a free software browser.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:I still love Firefox (Score:5, Insightful)
>"I could not care less if Mozilla withers and dies. As long as some kind soul(s) steps in to continue keeping firefox alive"
Don't underestimate just how complex and time-consuming actual maintenance of Firefox is. It is not something some "kind soul" can do. It is one thing to fork something that is modern and maintained to make your own browser. It is quite another to maintain the basis of what you forked.
Need to strip it down (Score:5, Insightful)
Every browser that's come along has done so with one primary marketing pitch: We are learner, cleaner and faster.
But then as time goes by, they start bolting shit on and before you know it, the GT40 you thought you had turns out to be an under powered station wagon.
Someone has to have the nerve to build something great and leave it alone .
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: Need to strip it down (Score:5, Insightful)
I think both of you are missing the actual problem. Firefox succeeded in the void of Internet Explorer. Chrome doesn't have that problem. Google spends inordinate amount of time in pushing its shit as standards and has hired a bunch of very expensive and hard working people - pretty much anyone they could their hands on all over the world - to implement those standards. You cannot just implement it.
The reality is that Firefox should die. It will be final nail to bring about some regulatory changes in chrome's monopoly. From its ashes the Phoenix will rise again.
As I have said earlier, Firefox's management is bought by Google. Google has thrown some money in their direction in hopes that it will keep away their monopoly recognition for next 3 years.
Re: Need to strip it down (Score:5, Informative)
Chrome didn't kill Firefox, Mozilla killed Firefox with their user hostile changes (lets basically kill all addons, even though that was how we got 90% of our users), inability to implement proper memory management and no sandboxing or multi-threading.
Re: (Score:3)
Someone has to have the nerve to build something great and leave it alone .
The difficulty is, who decides when it's optimally great? Sure, I loved Firefox in the beginning - almost everybody did. But would I have willingly left just-pre-Australis Firefox in favour of the Firefox that existed circa 2005? Hell no! For me, (and probably lots of other folks), the sweet spot for FF was just prior to Australis. But for many others, the Golden Age was probably back near the beginning.
Now my sweet spot is Pale Moon, and I hope to hell it stays around and doesn't jump the shark the way Fir
Re: (Score:3)
Someone has to have the nerve to build something great and leave it alone .
The difficulty is, who decides when it's optimally great?
Stop thrashing the code, you're not making it better.
The premise is not that we should stop making changes because we've achieved perfection, the premise is that we should stop making changes because code thrash demonstrably reduces the code quality over time and results in bloated monstrosities that have to be abandoned to be escaped; not because they can't be fixed, but merely because the maintenance developers refuse to stop making changes, and if they start over they've written less code and so it will
Re: I still love Firefox (Score:3, Insightful)
Um...didn't three "kind souls" create Firexox by de-crufting Netscape Navigator?
Why did this browser need 200+ apparently expendable (no matter how good or talented) people to keep it maintained? More than three are needed for sure, but who says a browser props up a corporation?
Re: (Score:3)
Way back in the day, Firefox had an almost infinitely configurable UI. You could take elements (like the URL bar, home button, bookmarks, button, etc) and just drag them around. Rearrange them however you please. I came up with a config which worked really well for me - took up minimal s
Re: I still love Firefox (Score:3)
Will it go on? I doubt it. Once there's not enough money to pay developers on a constant basis, you'll get people doing it on a part-time basis.
And lots of infighting on things like different features, some of which are incompatible with others, so fork it â¦
And fixing bugs without being paid for it is boring when you can be scratching your own itch â¦
Google threw them a bone this time to keep the EU antitrust people away. That won't work if they have so few users that they're no
Re: I still love Firefox (Score:5, Informative)
Exactly. Launching VPN services and other nonsense just turns me off. I donate for a browser not all this other stuff.
I get it, if you launch a product that takes off you can start raking in the big bucks. And in fantasyland that money could go to Firefox.
But money is addictive and such a product will undoubtedly take priority over Firefox. It will either end Firefox, or turn it into Chrome.
Re: I still love Firefox (Score:5, Informative)
> I donate for a browser
Actually you don't, and this is something very important to be aware of. When you donate, you donate to the Mozilla Foundation, which has all kinds of initiatives toward "Building a healthier internet". Developing Firefox is not one of them: that falls under the Mozilla Corporation. The Mozilla Foundation is partly financed by the Mozilla Corporation, so it's not like your donations to the Foundation eventually end op in the Corporation.
This is a common misconception. I had no idea about any of this. I learned about it from a number of comments on a recent Ars Technica article. And it's true: the donation page (https://donate.mozilla.org/en-US/) says "Contributions go to the Mozilla Foundation, a 501(c)(3) organization based in Mountain View, California, to be used in its discretion for its charitable purposes. They are tax-deductible in the U.S. to the fullest extent permitted by law." Here's the Foundation's homepage: https://foundation.mozilla.org... [mozilla.org]. Nothing there talks about developing Firefox. And according to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]: "The Mozilla Foundation is funded by donations and 2% of annual net revenues from the Mozilla Corporation, amounting to over US$8.3 million in 2016."
So there is actually not even a way to donate to help support Firefox development! The only way to help, I guess, is to actively contribute to the code.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
As long as the current management remains (Mitchell Baker and cronies) there is no hope for Fireofx. Not only are they completely incompetent, they have repeadedly put their giant egos ahead of everything else.
Re: I still love Firefox (Score:3, Interesting)
I can only guess: Because
1. They are technically still a business, as opposed to Linux. As in: They still think they are Netscape.
3. Google basically forces them to. As Google adds pointless kitchen sinks every month, and stupid developers and users go "Oooh, shiny!", and switch away from Firefox, or keep Chrome on their new PC/device that got set up by somebody indirectly paid/forced by Google. (Like Android.) Or like Flappy Bird/WhatsApp/Facebook: "Because everyone's using it! (He says, while nobody's usi
I still love Firefox (Score:2)
I am not in disagreement with you, that the control needs to change.
But Linux is different. Ignoring Linux is headed by Linus who is literally the guy who created the kernel, and not only profits from its success, wants it to succeed, but is contributed to by other companies so you get crazy situations where Microsoft's Patented exfat is having Samsung's latest Android incarnation patched into the kernel.
Mozilla is some kind of charity business hybrid run donationware for a handful of search engines so they
Re: (Score:3)
Abysmally bad management at Mozilla.
Re:I still love Firefox (Score:5, Insightful)
I think that's a bit harsh if you look at where Firefox was when Chrome came along and took the lion's share of the market.
Firefox was single threaded and it showed. Chrome's performance was lightyears ahead and back when Flash was still a thing one tab crashing didn't bring the whole browser down.
Firefox also had a huge amount of legacy cruft in the codebase and the add-on system was fundamentally insecure and incompatible with a multi-threaded architecture.
So they had two huge problems that could never be fixed without years of work and a lot of pain. And to their credit they did fix them and Firefox is one of the fastest browsers out there now, while being better than Chrome on memory usage.
Re: (Score:3)
I think if we look at history, Mozilla's management has been pretty terrible. That's a subjective statement, of course. But objectively, it's pretty clear there were a number of very serious gaffs and missed opportunities. Who else do you blame but management?
What you said is true, but they reacted to all those issues *painfully* slowly as an organization. By the time they did (in 2017), they're basically now "as good as" Chrome (perhaps even slightly better), but being "as good as" a different product
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
you don't need 750 employees to maintain an open source and privacy concerned browser. that's a business. and they have been ...
"looking for more revenue from "sources outside of search" but "this did not happen."
Re: (Score:3)
Re:I still love Firefox (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm baffled at your comment. Its like you don't understand that the whole point of DNS over HTTP is to exclude all local and intermediate eyes from prying. Do you hate HTTPS too because local business networks can't comb through all traffic, unencrypted? You also fail to understand that this service is optional and has several modes that go from off to fallback to #1option.
mozilla DNS has no security if you do not VERIFY (Score:2)
they restrict your choices of DNS providers and then do not give you the option of verifying the answers ?
no thank you I trust but verify...
DNSSEC
Re: (Score:3)
they restrict your choices of DNS providers
You mean the choice between Cloudflare, NextDNS, and Custom. You do know Custom isn't a company right? Maybe look that word up in the dictionary.
and then do not give you the option of verifying the answers ?
You don't seem to understand how DNS works. There's no point in you using DNSSEC to verify an answer that is authoritatively given to you in a way that can't be tampered with. I.e. if you use DoH then *YOU* do not need to worry about DNSSEC, your DoH provider does.
Re:I still love Firefox (Score:5, Interesting)
And yet it doesn't keep your ISP from prying because the IP address still comes across. On top of that the ISP can implement in their DNS a setting to ignore DNS over HTTP which Firefox respects and putting all this effort to waste. While breaking some network functionality. Now if we pushed for DNS with TLS, which exists, and Firefox would attempt to use encrypted DNS directly with the DNS server supplied by the OS it would solve many more problems than it creates.
The biggest frustration I have with technology today is that everyone pretends to care for the user but nobody respects the users choices. DNS over HTTP is a good idea when the user makes the choice. A terrible idea to replace DNS or secure DNS. If you want to secure your DNS the only answer is run your own or use a VPN you trust.
Start cutting (Score:5, Insightful)
And I don't mean personnel. Start cutting the mountains of useless code from Firefox and make it a user friendly browser again. Stop hiding configuration settings in some nebulous listing the average user can't find or won't be willing to seek out or removing them completely. Stop trying to force out updates every six minutes. Stop adding non-browser related cruft.
Firefox used to be slim, fast, simple but instead of listening to the end users, all these overpaid hacks known as developers assumed the "We know better than you because we're developers" attitude.
And this is the result. Mozilla has no one to blame but themselves for Firefox's downfall.
Re: (Score:3)
I am totally down with having a more useful 'configuration' dialog with an advanced button, rather than the purposefully hidden About:Config page.
For other things though, I dont really have too much problem with firefox. Edge is just awful and broken, and Chrome seems to want to date every nefarious bit of web software out there and make-out on the first date.
I have a preference for Firefox over Chrome simply because of how it operates too. It could definitely use some improvements, not the least of which
Mobile burned (Score:2)
To much dismay the about:settings option has been removed completely from mobile Firefox.
Re: (Score:2)
I've gone bck to Firefox 68 and turned off automatic updates.
Tell that to the users, developers and Google! (Score:2)
They do not do that by choice, I think.
It's just that when Google announces its latest set of kitchen sinks, they have no choice but to follow along or be shunned by stupid users and developers.
To make matters worse, we learned during IE6 times, that simply being feature-for-feature equal is not enough. You need to add something that distinguishes you, to give anyone any reason to choose you over others.
And to give anyone any reason to *switch* to you, you even need something *more*, to overcome the cost o
Re: (Score:2)
They do not do that by choice, I think.
It's just that when Google announces its latest set of kitchen sinks, they have no choice but to follow along or be shunned by stupid users and developers.
They absolutely do have a choice. They can make additional functionality an add-on, or they can bake it into the browser. That was the whole fucking point of Firefox originally, where it was "a platform", it was simple, and you could extend it as you wanted, not as some foundation decided you wanted it extended.
When Mozilla started cramming shit into Firefox that nobody asked for whose purpose is to spy on your activity (i.e. Pocket) and furthermore spending donation money buying it and integrating it they
Re:Start cutting (Score:5, Insightful)
But when they do cut "useless" or at least little-used code like the RSS features, Slashdot readers are up in arms about it. Same when they removed the mountain of crud known as XUL. No-one can agree on what the useless features are (except for Pocket - that's the one thing everyone agrees shouldn't be in Firefox).
Re: (Score:3)
except for Pocket - that's the one thing everyone agrees shouldn't be in Firefox
I like pocket and use it often.
That's great, you could still use it just as well if it was an add-on.
Re: (Score:2)
>"instead of listening to the end users, all these overpaid hacks known as developers assumed the "We know better than you because we're developers" attitude."
I agree with you on that. However, Chom*/Google is no better in that regard. Perhaps even worse.
>"Mozilla has no one to blame but themselves for Firefox's downfall."
That is not entirely true. Google thew TONS of power/money/mindshare/advertising behind Chom*. And after capturing all the other non-Firefox browsers (except the single-platform
Re: Start cutting (Score:3)
They got GNOME DISEASE.
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:3)
Fuck having to install Adobe. The browser should do that. Basically you're telling all Linux users they should install proprietary software in order to read a common data format.
Re:Start cutting (Score:5, Insightful)
What actual crud is there in Firefox now? I'll give you Pocket, but other than that?
They ripped out the old NSAPI, XUL, the RSS reader, FTP support, that tab organizing thing the name of which I can't remember now... Apart from Pocket it's a pretty lean browser these days.
There sure are a lot of attacks against firefox (Score:5, Interesting)
I wonder who would have a vendetta against a browser which supports DoH, blocking trackers, a privacy dashboard, containers and out of the box isolation for facebook.
Re: There sure are a lot of attacks against firefo (Score:4, Insightful)
> DoH, blocking trackers, a privacy dashboard, containers and out of the box isolation
One of them is not like the other ...
*I* am against Mozilla punching a hole in my own VPN/DNS/CA to get exclusive spying rights for them and any government its employees are under, escpecially in light of the current Mozilla commercialization move. So are you saying I am Facebook?
And I am against being so batshit insane retarded that you wrap a lower layer protocol into a higher layer protocol that needs the lower layer protocol for no reason at all, except to web-ify ALL the things!
Like there isn't a solution that doesn't involve the software design anti-pattern known as the inner-platform effect that the WhatWG lives off of...
Re: There sure are a lot of attacks against firefo (Score:4, Insightful)
*I* am against Mozilla punching a hole in my own VPN/DNS/CA to get exclusive spying rights
Dial back the hyperbole.
Mozilla have announced it repeatedly and have clear instructions on how to disable it. It's not like they either forced you into it or tricked you. Just because you don't personally want it doesn't mean it isn't a sound default for the majority of users.
Re: There sure are a lot of attacks against firefo (Score:4, Informative)
*I* am against Mozilla punching a hole in my own VPN/DNS/CA to get exclusive spying rights
Dial back the hyperbole.
Mozilla have announced it repeatedly and have clear instructions on how to disable it. It's not like they either forced you into it or tricked you. Just because you don't personally want it doesn't mean it isn't a sound default for the majority of users.
I have a guest WiFi on my router which uses a DNS provider that allows me to block some addresses. DoH allows anyone to circumvent the "my house, my rules" policy since I don't have control over the browser they are using.
Re: (Score:3)
"Security theatre" costs time, money, and stability. DNS over HTTPS, for example, is not that useful of a security feature. It sends your DNS requuests to a centtralized off-site server, which can, itself, track your DNS requests. It's a "performance enhancement" to allow that off-site DNS server to perform better than your local ISP resolver, but that that off-site server has not, so far, proven to benefit local users at all.
Re: (Score:2)
Indeed. There is actually zero need for this. The only thing DNS over HTTPS allows is that centralized tracking. The security benefit for the user is likely negative.
Re:There sure are a lot of attacks against firefox (Score:5, Interesting)
Well no. The purpose of DNS over HTTPS is centralized censorship. You can only access the "web channels" that the DoH operator permits. You can buy "packages" of "web channels" unless the Master Censor says no, you cannot have that channel.
Re: (Score:2)
Cloudflare is the default provider for DoH in Firefox. Its a decision people can make about whether they want Cloudflare having a log of their web traffic, or their local isp. My local ISP is Comcast, I can just about guarantee they are mining my DNS log for everything its worth. Cloudflare, on the other hand, has a page that they detail, legally binding, how privacy will be protected- logs won't be kept beyond 24hr etc https://wiki.mozilla.org/Secur... [mozilla.org]
Re: (Score:2)
It is not legally binding. It is merely a web page with no force in law.
The portable version can (Score:2)
Just copy it to an external drive...
It's a smartphone world (Score:5, Interesting)
They burnt both their next generation engine...which would have been one of my choices.
They burnt security which puts their VPN business in a bad light so that option looks weak.
They need to fix the UI...and it doesn't need a overpriced massive team of *nudge* *nudge* mates.
I think their main choice is to go "mobile first". mobile looks like an unloved stepchild and was wonderful...till they broke it with a confusing UI. With proper promotion.
Launch antitrust against Apple in mobile to get full Firefox on iOS. The wind is in the right direction...nobody is gonna want that skin on iOS.
But the bottom line is there is something wrong with the finance at Firefox...it is like middle management is siphoning of the Money from the search engines. It needs to run like a... business.
Unique Selling Point (Score:3)
The Engine is the crown Jewels. Why use a skinned version of chrome as opposed to a actual chrome. It is a unique selling point, and would give Mozilla a relaunch.
A new engine had the potential to be a better engine considering the vastly different web we have today large...literally an app platform...and a viewer for showing text and pictures with hyperlinks. The browser has changed.
Anecdotally XUL seemed to kill it for me (Score:3)
I remember when they (Moz) put all the effort in to the XUL UI system, and maybe it was coincidental but I recall performance going to the dogs after that. Above and beyond everything else, the lacklustre performance keeps pushing me back to Chrome over Firefox, which is sad, as I've been using Firefox from back in the days when it was first spawned from the Netscape code and Phoenix ( still prefer the name :( ).
Re: Anecdotally XUL seemed to kill it for me (Score:2)
The general idea of a UI description language is not wrong though. It is a very useful concept.
The problem was more with it being an interpreted XML-based language with a bad intertreter too.
Of course, with me being in the camp of generating all UI straight from the data model and a theme, want any of that to be killed with fire anyway. :)
Saved how? Browsers were always a popularity war. (Score:3)
The sad reality is that the general public will always use the browser that works "best" for them. It was never about security or anything that any browser company ever did. People for example use Google because it works for them. They'll drop it faster than you can blink if they can find something that works better. Mozilla was for a while able to build their business model on that popularity but as anyone knows the public can be fickle. I use Seamonkey for example, probably the most direct descendant of Netscape for nostalgic reasons. It doesn't work as well as Chrome or probably even Firefox but I hardly expect it to be "saved" for that simple reason.
Not Sure I Agree (Score:2)
Users are prone to inertia. They have a hard time evaluating against any reasonable metric, so I don't agree.
You can see how Firefox came to dominate, and Chrome, but that market share was years to gain...and lose.
Firefox has a 1.2 Billion guaranteed money for 3 years and some market share, but we can't see it's direction changing.
Re: (Score:2)
Users use what is lying close at hand, until it won't do something they want to do. Then and only then will they go looking for an alternative, if then.
Users used Aieee! until it fell behind. Then they switched to Firefox.
Then Chrome started to be preinstalled, bundled etc., so they switched to Chrome.
I agree (Score:2)
...but Winifred Mitchell Baker is not pursuing anticompetitive complaints against Apple, Google or Microsoft.
#FreeFortnite
Firefox needs to be saved from Mozilla (Score:4, Informative)
Re: (Score:2, Troll)
So you have come here to complain instead of taking action yourself?
Money (Score:2)
There are forks around, but Firefox unlike say Libreoffice with ran on half a million...runns on over 400million a year. Nothing will change until that is taken away.
Re: (Score:2)
Iâ(TM)ve been calling for a proper fork for years, but people would rather complain rather than take action.
It's a big job and it's going to take a lot of talent, because it's baroque.
I'd love to help, but I'm not a programmer. I can write docs, though. If you organize an effort, put me down to do that.
If all you want to do is whine, well, whine on! That's all I'm doing. But it's also all you're doing.
Too late (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Death by management corruption....
Embracing DoH? Really? (Score:3, Insightful)
Of all the things, you had to display DoH as if it was a good thing?
This only shows that all your statements regarding security are worthless, since you are clueless.
DoH only means Mozilla gets exclusive DNS spying rights, and furder enroachment of pointlessly web-ifying ALL the things. That's literally all it does.
You probably believe TLS with CAs by people you never met built into your browser is secure too ... --.--
Re: (Score:2)
DoH only means Mozilla gets exclusive DNS spying rights, and furder enroachment of pointlessly web-ifying ALL the things. That's literally all it does.
Except Mozilla doesn't get your DoH queries. They go to Cloudflare if your ISP is not running a DoH server, and there is a strict privacy policy [mozilla.org]. And it provides secure name service to users who can't otherwise get it. So it literally provides a needed service to some users, and it literally doesn't give DNS spying rights to Mozilla. It literally does nothing you claim it does.
Re: (Score:2)
A "privacy policy" is like a politician. You know they are lying because their lips are moving.
Browsers are a commodity. (Score:2)
Browsers are a commodity. I've watched my friends and family switch browsers since Netscape days. When do they switch? When the current browser becomes a pain to use and the alternative is better. I personally noticed myself doing the exact same thing, except with some security and battery life aspects in consideration. I switched to and from Firefox 3 times since it's been around, switched out every time the browser became painfully slow, a resource hog, or not able to properly render pages I wanted to see
A target for important 3rd party plugins (Score:2)
Firefox is my go-to browser for using the Zotero bibliographic citation software, and without Zotero, I would be dead-in-the-water with respect to any scholarly publishing.
Re: (Score:2)
Exactly this. I kept Firefox for a long time even when most people I knew had switched to Chrome. I was using their developer tools and their password manager so I really didn't want to switch but I finally switched because Firefox was too much of a memory hog. Now that I've switched, I likely won't look for a new browser until I find a problem with Chrome that is compelling enough to want to go thru the hassle of switching.
still the only major browser (Score:5, Insightful)
Which is available on both desktop and mobile and which supports ad blocking.
For that reason alone, it will always be useful.
Re: (Score:2)
Which is available on both desktop and mobile and which supports ad blocking.
For that reason alone, it will always be useful.
I personally wish all of the UI settings would stay the same between updates. I really don't understand the need to change any settings or UI. That being said, it's not like I'm going to switch to something else. Ad blocking, script blocking, and deleting all of my private date each time I close the browser. This is absolutely why I use Firefox as my primary browser when I'm . . . browsing.
Re: (Score:3)
Chom* Borg (Score:5, Insightful)
>"If you have the skills and time, the best possible support is to join the Mozilla community and contribute to their code base."
The best possible thing, is to just download, install, and use Firefox. It costs nothing and requires no "skills" or hardly any time. That is what keeps it relevant. Web developers and sites then see it being used and can't pull crap like the "IE Only days", only this time with Chom* [Google].
Make no mistake- there is only one non-Chom* alternative in the multiplatform browser space, and it is Firefox. If that is lost, not only have we lost browser choice, there is then nothing left to prevent Google from pushing any "standard" it wants (unless you count Safari, which only runs on Apple gear, and most Apple users probably are using Chom* now, too). Google is already flexing its muscles, the writing is on the wall. The only reason Google donates anything to Mozilla/Firefox is to keep Firefox around as a token of competition.
If you value privacy, standards, choice, configurability, and security- then you should not only be using Firefox now, but encouraging family and friends to do the same. Users switched away from Firefox because of Google's constant harassment banners on their near-monopoly search engine and other products. And for the performance BEFORE Firefox Quantum. Once Firefox converted to Quantum, almost 3 YEARS ago now, Firefox has been on-par with Chom*'s speed and features, and better in many other ways. And now the threat of the other Chom* from Microsoft, who is pushing it HARD. If you have not used Firefox in the last 3 years (especially the 2), then any per-conceived negative notions you have about it are almost certainly wrong.
This doesn't mean I want a world with ONLY Firefox- but there is no fear of that. If it had even, say, 20% of the users, that would be enough to prevent it from being ignored and keep the pressure of real competition present. The web is supposed to be about standards, not a single browser (full or engine), controlled by a single company, whose motivations are absolutely not aligned with actual privacy, choice, or open/community-based-standards.
Re:Chom* Borg (Score:4, Insightful)
If you value privacy, standards, choice, configurability, and security- then you should not only be using Firefox now, but encouraging family and friends to do the same.
If only the Mozilla foundation valued those things more, they would put less crap we didn't ask for into the browser, and work harder on bug fixes. I know they're not as resume-building as putting in new features, but they're much more important.
Re: (Score:2)
I do. But I also think that Mozilla lacks the feedback on new features because everyone turns the telemetry off. I'm torn on that. On one hand I don't want anyone to collect data on my browsing and other habits, on other hand how is Mozilla supposed to know that I turn off URL formatting and trimming, DoH, disable autoupdate, ask for download, external application for pdf, ...
Winifred Mitchell Baker (Score:5, Insightful)
Remove Winifred Mitchell Baker, she is getting 2.5 million and by every measure she is not earning it.
Incompetence should not be rewarded.
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:3)
You literally can't do that in a non-profit.
Winifred Mitchell Baker (Score:3)
I will play...during her 6 years as CEO Firefox market share continues to plummet. Despite having a steady income of billions. There is now a three year window to turn the sinking ship around with no strategy and a quarter of her staff out on their arses those working on the new engine, and those on security, but to top it all you are actually posting in a topic entitled "can Firefox be saved"
So yeah I think she should be gone...today. In fact anyone in management, but the rot starts at the top.
google is helping (Score:2)
Yes, Firefox can be saved. (Score:2)
Finance, not Relevance (Score:2)
Firefox is on its way to irrelevance. Making matters even worse, Mozilla's just had its second round of layoffs.
First, there's nothing about Firefox' offerings that make it irrelevant. Second, the only problem it has is money. And money's an issue because everyone's reducing expenditure due to the GLOBAL FINANCIAL CRISIS brought on by the GLOBAL PANDEMIC.
Never Google's chrome browser (Score:3)
latest version (Score:2)
For all these people who are complaining, are they using the latest version.
I say that because generally later versions of things use more memory.
I use an older one. It also has all the bells that people like that are removed in whatever is more modern.
As for other browsers, what choices are there, on desktop of course?
Yes (Score:2)
Re:Firefox vs the idea of Firefox. (Score:5, Interesting)
What's wrong with the UI of Firefox?
How often do you actually use the UI of a browser?
I don't see where all the hate is coming from. For me, Firefox is a no-brainer. Can't use Chrome if you don't want Google to know 100% of what you're doing on the web (they already know 80% anyhow) and Microsoft is and has always been a trainwreck on the browser-side of things. Edge is an improvement, of course, since it's no longer IE. But why use any browser of a large corporation instead of an open source foundation who is not interested in selling or abusing your data?
Re:Firefox vs the idea of Firefox. (Score:5, Informative)
I agree, a ton of stuff I do on Firefox easily is annoying as hell on Chrome.
for example, on Firefox you can drag a tab into the bookmarks bar, or onto a folder on the bookmarks bar. I also dragged the bookmarks bar *onto* the address bar. so now my bookmarks bar is just a drop-down folder next to the url box. These are not thing you can do in Chrome. Firefox UI has things that are easier to do, therefore any time I try Chrome I just get annoyed very quickly at stuff like having to actually click to do the bookmarking thing, select the right folder etc, whereas in Firefox you just drag the tab wherever and you have sorted bookmarks.
Re: (Score:2)
Other examples include that if you right-click a tab in Firefox the top option is reload tab, so that option is right under your cursor. Whereas if you right-click on a tab in Chrome, the top option is "new tab". Now, let's think logically here, if you *chose* to right-click on a specific tab what's the most likely action you'd want to take - opening a new tab, or reloading the one you actually clicked on? Positioning "reload tab" right under the cursor makes more sense. There's a "+" icon next to the tabs
Re:Firefox vs the idea of Firefox. (Score:5, Insightful)
It seems you didn't get the memo: bookmarks are old school. Now you search for things and the all mighty Google will reveal them to you.
Firefox vs the idea of Firefox. (Score:2, Insightful)
Sorry but if you agree or not is neither here or there. Firefox which literally had an award winning interface...introduced an unpopular UI on the desktop, and basically left it despite it being unloved. The same has been repeated with Firefox mobile, and unlike the Desktop you have a measured rating where Firefox was loved to lothed and again they have left it. It is measurable how bad the UI.
You need to try especially hard to create a barrier to the web...
Re: (Score:2)
What's wrong with the UI of Firefox?
A number of things, but most of them are minor IMO. For one thing, I don't want which search engine the "awesome" bar (uh no) uses to be determined by which search engine is selected in the search bar. That's fucking stupid. It should always be the default search engine. (Calling the address bar the awesome bar is also fucking stupid. It confuses people. Yes, really. No, not me. But I've seen people posting clearly confused about it.)
How often do you actually use the UI of a browser?
Constantly! You use the UI of any program constantly! That's what UI is fo
Re: (Score:3)
They broke Classic Theme Restorer. Haven't used it since. If I wanted a browser with Chrome's UI I'd use Chrome, not a bad copy of it.
Re: (Score:2)
What UI?
You mean typing a URL into the URL field and pressing enter? Or clicking on a link in a web page?
Re: (Score:3)
What UI?
You mean typing a URL into the URL field and pressing enter? Or clicking on a link in a web page?
Sure, or adding bookmarks, selecting bookmarks, managing bookmarks, searching history, syncing content across devices, managing web passwords, adding/configuring plugins, refreshing a page, going forward /backward, I could go on.
We get it, you’re a simple person with simple needs. So simple that app UIs are irrelevant.
Given that a browser is a quasi-OS for the web, I think the UI is pretty importa
Re: Firefox needed to be separated from the hands (Score:2)
And youâ(TM)ve been brainwashed by the antisocialist mafia
Right Question (Score:2)
It is the right question, and asked at the right time... early.
It is nowhere near dead it will take years...for the money if not the market share to run out.
This thing is not being "killed" by natural selection...it is being bled dry, slowly by Winifred Mitchell Baker.
what Firefox (Score:3)
It has be dropping market share since 2010 to now a fifth of its former glory, and does not have the same compelling reasons as a must have browser.
it'll be fine is not really a worthwhile post when it is measurablely got a problem.