Follow Along Live with the Firefox 3.6 Release

Posted on January 21st, 2010 | No Comments »

If you haven’t already heard, Firefox 3.6 will be officially released today.  If you’re interested in what goes into a Firefox release, you can follow along live with the release of Firefox 3.6 over at Air Mozilla.  As I write this, several Mozilla employees are introducing themselves to those who are watching.  There appear to be two groups, one from Mountainview, California, and the other from Toronto, Canada, participating in the live video feed, at least at the time being.  Several minutes ago, Mike Beltzner, Mozilla’s Director of Firefox, appeared to announce that Firefox 3.6 will go live on the website around 8:25 to 8:40 Eastern time.  Given the current time, I’m guessing that’s PM.  That being said, firefox.com currently redirects to http://www.mozilla.com/en-US/firefox/upgrade.html which officially points to the Firefox 3.6 download and reports that the new version has already been downloaded over 37,500 times.

Head on over to Air Mozilla to follow along with the release day proceedings.

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Firefox 3.6 RC1 Released

Posted on January 9th, 2010 | 1 Comment »

Small Firefox LogoAs 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:

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.

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Around the Browsersphere #15

Posted on January 7th, 2010 | 5 Comments »

We’re covering everything from the difference between Yahoo! Answers and Stack Overflow, to Firefox sabotage against IE8 add-ons, to Taco Bell marketing campaigns in this trip around the browsersphere.  Are you ready?

General

Chrome

Fennec

Firefox

Internet Explorer

Opera

The Minor Players

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Minimum Browser Chrome Sizes

Posted on January 1st, 2010 | No Comments »

Even though we’re venturing into edge case territory here, it’s nonetheless interesting to see how the four main web browsers compare when reduced to their minimum chrome, or browser window, size on Windows 7:

minimum_browser_chrome_size_windows_7

I’m not sure what’s more surprising, how large IE is at its most-minimized state, or how small Chrome is.

You can read more about the differences over at Softpedia.

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Around the Browsersphere #14

Posted on January 1st, 2010 | 2 Comments »

I’ve been doing my best to keep my finger on the pulse of the browsersphere over on Twitter, but you know you’re not getting the real deal until we go “around the browsersphere.”

General

Chrome

Firefox

Internet Explorer

Opera

Minor Players

There’s a lot more to cover, but that should hold you over until 2010. ;)

Happy New Year, everyone.

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Around the Browsersphere #13

Posted on December 17th, 2009 | 1 Comment »

I debated whether or not I should skip ahead to #14, but I’m not really that superstitious.

General

Chrome

Firefox

Internet Explorer

Opera

The Minor Players

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Microsoft to Offer Browser Ballot Screen in Europe

Posted on December 16th, 2009 | 2 Comments »

The big news in the browsersphere today is that European regulators have dropped their antitrust case against Microsoft after the company agreed to offer European users of Windows a “ballot screen” allowing them to choose from 11 alternate web browsers.  Internet Explorer will continue to be an option, of course, but the following browsers will also be available as choices for the users:  Firefox, Safari, Chrome, Opera, AOL Explorer, Maxthon, K-Meleon, Flock, Avant Browser, Sleipnir and Slim Browser.

For more on the stipulations of the deal, be sure to read the coverage from The New York Times (via @MaxthonNews).

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Twitter Watch #3

Posted on December 13th, 2009 | 2 Comments »

To borrow from Pink Floyd, is there anybody out there?

Ironically enough, Browsersphere has been neglecting the browsersphere a little like Microsoft neglected Internet Explorer earlier this decade.  After all, my last post was way back in June.  However, unlike Microsoft, it isn’t the competition that has jolted this site back to life.  On the contrary, sites like Avencius and Twitter accounts like @AltBrowser have actually made me feel a little bit better about the whole ordeal, knowing that at least someone is out there covering the browsersphere in my absence.  Truth is, the site went dark out of pure laziness on my part.  Well, that and the fact that I’ve been pretty consumed by another project.  Nevertheless, I’m back, and after catching up a bit on what’s been going on, my first order of business is to share a little bit about what’s been tweeted in the browsersphere lately.  So let’s get to it.

That’s it for Twitter Watch #3.  Believe it or not, Twitter Watch #2 was so long ago that I was still using Summize to search for tweets. :)

Before I end this post, since we’re on the subject of Twitter, I should mention that Browsersphere is now on Twitter as well.  Just follow @Browsersphere for real-time updates, links to new site content, etc.

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Wired Remembers Mozilla 1.0 Release Seven Years Ago

Posted on June 5th, 2009 | 1 Comment »

Wired’s This Day In Tech remembers the release of Mozilla 1.0 seven years ago today.  Here’s an excerpt:

Months after launch, the browser had only captured a minuscule percentage of the market. The goal was to beat Microsoft with open source. Netscape couldn’t do it. And, according to [Asa] Dotzler, “we realized Mozilla couldn’t do it, either.”

While Mozilla 1.0 wasn’t a success, what followed certainly was. Two Mozilla contributors, Ben Goodger and Blake Ross, proposed taking things back to basics. The Mozilla source code was stripped down and rewritten once again, and all of the extraneous features were canned.

In late 2004, a faster, slimmer and easier-to-use browser emerged: Mozilla Firefox.

Hat-tip to @firefox and @mitchellbaker on Twitter.

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Firefox Has a New Add-on

Posted on June 2nd, 2009 | No Comments »

Sorry folks, but when my wife passes these along, I can’t resist:

firefox-has-new-add-on

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