Following the update to
Firefox
stable earlier this week, Mozilla released today updates to its Aurora
and Beta versions that introduce some pretty hefty changes for the
Firefox on PCs.
Firefox 11 beta (download for Windows | Mac | Linux) presages some hefty changes for the browser.
The biggest one, which wasn't present in the Firefox 11 Aurora release,
is add-on sync. You will now be able to mirror the same add-on
installations and settings across multiple desktops.
Although Google
Chrome has been able to sync add-ons for some time, its implementation
has been notably uneven, so it'll be interested to see how well Firefox
handles it.
A more silent update process
is coming to Firefox on Windows, also mimicking Chrome's updates.
Windows' User Account Control will only require user input for updates
once; thereafter, updates will occur seamlessly when the browser is
restarted. The benefit of this is that security updates generally won't
require any unusual user action.
This is first available in the new
Firefox 12 Aurora (download for Windows, Mac, and Linux).
Accompanying it will be a change in Mozilla add-on policy, so that the
majority of add-ons--about 80 percent--will be marked as compatible by
default. This is now in Firefox 11 beta.
Once an update has been pushed from Mozilla's servers, it will wait up
to 12 hours for the user to restart the browser. After half a day, it
will open a notification window asking the user to restart, but there is
an option to ignore it. In the blog post announcing Firefox 11 beta,
Mozilla said that around only 1 percent of users will ever see it.
The new beta also includes support for Google's SPDY protocol
for faster and safer site loading, a 3D view for the Page Inspector
developer's tool, a live update option for changing CSS code on the fly,
and support for importing data from Chrome.
It's a bit strange to think
that this hasn't been offered before, given how Chrome's market share
has grown.
There was no release today of a new Firefox for
Android beta or Aurora, because Mozilla is focusing its Android team on the new native interface.
It landed in Firefox 11 Aurora, and is notable for being significantly
faster and supporting Flash video. Originally, it didn't work with
Firefox Sync, although that was recently fixed. Firefox 11 for all
platforms is due in March.
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