Firefox 3.6 RC1 Released
Posted on January 9th, 2010 | 1 Comment »
As promised, Firefox 3.6 RC1 was released yesterday. Despite my warnings against downloading the candidate of the release candidate earlier this week, it doesn’t look like there was ever more than one candidate, so if you jumped the gun and downloaded that candidate, you’ve likely got the same build anyway.
Despite the fact that Firefox 3.6 RC1 was released on schedule yesterday, it has received very little attention from the usual official outlets, as far as I can tell. For example, there is no mention of the new release candidate on the main Firefox page, and there has been no mention of the release via Firefox’s Twitter account.
Nevertheless, the RC1 build looks official, and the following are some of its key features and changes:
- Changes have been made to the way third party software integrates with Firefox in an attempt to avoid crashes.
- Nearly 100 bugs have been fixed since the last beta build to improve stability, performance, etc.
- JavaScript can now be loaded asynchronously, another performance boost.
- Improved DOM, CSS and HTML5 support.
If you decide to give Firefox 3.6 RC1 a spin, feel free to share your thoughts on the new release here in comments.
Update: I should clarify that the RC1 build is at least mentioned on the beta releases page.
Tags: Crashes, CSS, DOM, Firefox, Firefox 3.6, HTML5, JavaScript, Performance, Release Candidates, Releases, Stability
One Response
Using
Mozilla Firefox 3.5.7 on
Windows XP
until the improve the boot time on Windows, further improve the memory management *and* get every tab running in a separate process (not just plugins) then Firefox will not have advanced
Adding more support for all sorts of new web author trickery is great but useless until IE supports it.