The future for the Firefox browser looks grim, sitting between IE that is here to stay and the irresistible stamina of GoogleChrome the favorite browser of a while ago will go down in history not to be remembered anymore.
There is some writing on the wall to come to these conclusions: the slowed release of Fx 3.6,
the discontinuing of Fx 3.7 and a complete restructuring of the whole development process a la a complete overhaul to bring in all the developments of a myriad of extensions on a weak architectural model where the updates will come in the form of many patches and minor updates, a job that was even too much to perform without hiccups for the MS software giant with all their resources in IE.
This will mean a certain formula for disaster…conflicting hotfixes and surfacepacks without certainty how and what it will work out on the underlying platform leaves the Fx developers with empty hands - the browser is no longer part of a strategic plan, but fully depends on the good will and the enthusiasm of many in the Fx community.
We have seen it coming, dear forum users, the Mozilla browser seemed doomed from the day GoogleChrome revealed their plans to come up with their new browser - their Google partner, Firefox, at once was left out in the cold, standing alone…
While GoogleChrome is steaming ahead urging Internet Explorer out of its update cycle to come to terms with a more active renewal policy for BlueE, Firefox will be more and more play to the role of the smaller in-between underdog.
If GoogleChrome had adopted the NoScript extension and brought it into their browser as by default, polonus would not have looked back to old Fx once. The protection of NoScript in the Mozilla browser is the only reason I haven’t left the once very popular browser and jumped ship alltogether as a beta-tester and bug-filer. From Flock we haven’t heard for quite some time now, not clear if they will not ever continue a GoogleChrome 2.0 Web browser variant, FlockChrome. Time will tell, folks, but you do not have to agree with me of course, time will tell…
Google Chrome is same what a browser should be, but yet need time to grow, one of the my friend who has friend in Google Team told me soon Google Chrome API would support scripts then scripts like NoScript would come, even that Google Chrome would have native XSS protection and such as…
also, right now Google Chrome is missing some minor stuff like support download in the API, so download managers would not be able integrate very well.
but, Google Chrome is unique! in the performance, in Firefox and IE we had to wait a very long for program itself to load and then moving between tabs another pain… but in Chrome (like other Google Products) every things is fast, also Google is bringing new things which is really useful for users and not just useful for marketing/adverts. (e.g. pinned tabs, dragging tabs to do them side by side or…)
also, Google Chrome ext. are really great, never crash browser or slow it down, well programed addon engine is unique!
Task manager is unique too! easily able to terminate plugins or tabs or ext., I’ve never seen like this before!
also, with Google Chrome I’ve more space to visit sites, fewer toolbars like old menu bar and classic status bar.
so, like you I see no reason to back to Firefox… why slow down my life and deal with all the problems it has, I let Google speed up my life!
I don’t find Firefox to be slow and problematic. Have been using it since version 1.5 and i still like it.
Sure Chrome starts up faster but the version i want (the 4.x) is still buggy and so are extensions for it.
hey I missed that thread…I unfortunately have to agree, Chrome’s development is moving so fast and the experience with it is absolutely amazing. It’s a rocket, it just flies…many extensions are there already, yeah NoScript is missing and there seem to be problems for implementation (see in NS forums)…Firefox that I still use 90% of the time is gonna lose this battle, that’s obvious. Give it a few months or one year and it’s done. Also Chromium being OpenSource (like FF), more and more people bring their own custom version, this browser is just made to browse, ie get instantly to the page you want as if you were navigating in Windows Explorer…yeah, the speed factor again, Firefox will have troubles to match that. It’s slowly giving the sensation that it (FF) became an old and gigantic dinosaur with two feet stuck in a pool of mud, and I don’t like that. The beast is dying
ps: yeah, confirming that no matter the number of extensions you add to Chrome, it always start as fast ;D …when Firefox, yeah, no need to comment about it…Mozilla said they would change the extension system (probably for FF4) to make compatibility between versions not such a pain like it is now…don’t know if they thought about the startup speed as well…
I don’t want to ignore something just because I’m a Google fan!
Mozilla Firefox is a browser with an out-dated and poor core, so whatever Mozilla do to fix it is just waste of time and Bye Bye Firefox! but Firefox been there a long time so many minor stuff is developed in it.
Google Chrome is exactly different, Google is starting with a great core (Language/Engine) but yet is new and need time to fix the problems and fill the gaps and add future handy stuff. so I don’t see a good future for Firefox projects, I can see the day Chrome become main browser in the world (if Microsoft don’t bring some special/secret project).
scrolling web pages, including this forum, is much smoother in Firefox than in Chrome, even with “smooth scrolling” disabled in FF.
Chrome doesn’t own a proper password manager (no master password, no UI encryption, database file containing passwords is encrypted using Windows EFS certificate)
If you tell Chrome to never remember a password for a site, the setting is gone after wiping cookies, when Firefox still has an edge concerning native options, that’s gonna be hard to match…but average users won’t care I’m afraid.
YouTube videos in Firefox started to get choppy. YouTube getting ready to roll out their HTML5 player which Flash Player is not needed and you will have to use Google Chrome, Safari, or IE8 with Chrome Frame and an MP4 decoder.
I was surprised that Firefox is not supported even though Html 5 is supported by Firefox 3.5
Few months ago I visited Youtube and Firefox 3.5 was shown to be supported in Html 5 by Youtube along side Chrome and Safari and IE 8 without Chrome Frame
I don’t think Firefox is going away anytime soon, the vast amount of extentions and themes will keep Firefox around, take a look at opera, they’re still here.
please works with both of them for a hour and then compare, I’ve seen my Firefox used Memory up to 500MB during a day, and I need to closed Firefox every hour or so to free up memory and open Firefox again. look likes a memory leak
The only reason I still have Firefox and IE 8 handy are for the few instances that Chrome may not be able to handle
a website.
Outside of those few instances,
Chrome cons:
1 - No black/white listing of cookies
2 - No option to open a file instead of just downloading it
3 - Extensions use a lot of memory and each gets treated as a separate tab. Yes I know that’s for stability but it soon fills up your task manager.
4 - Extension settings are stored in the cache so if you clear your private data you also lose your extension settings
5 - Uses more memory than Firefox if you just have default installation and the same tabs/pages open
6 - It actually gets installed in your profile directory and not in the program files directory.
7 - No option to set the maximum cache size
Some of the above may exist and I just missed them.
Anyway Firefox is showing a lot of promise for version 4 and we also have Opera working on 10.5 which comes complete with both a new version of their Presto rendering engine with HTML 5/CSS 3 support and a totally new JavaScript engine. I also notice both are moving towards having tabs at the top like Chromium/Chromium use and Safari used in a beta of 4.
Extension settings are stored in the cache so if you clear your private data you also lose your extension settings
yeah I saw that, and that’s really bad : losing all my ad-blocking settings for instance every time I clear the cache…also getting welcome messages as if I just installed an extension, when it’s been there for a while…this is completely nuts.
No option to open a file instead of just downloading it
no big deal...and Firefox doesn't always offer this, this depends on the site you get the file from. You can still, like in FF, run it once it's downloaded from Chrome's interface or open the folder where it's located, always from the Chrome interface.