Firefox has been one browser that has improved a lot over time,
and while Internet Explorer continues to receive the negative feedback
from users across the globe, Mozilla’s offering has actually grown into a
worthy contender against almost any internet browser, most notably
Google Chrome. Mozilla’s focus towards bringing the best of the best to
its users continues, and with the release of Firefox 20, they’ve brought
some much needed (and appreciated) enhancements to their already
popular browser. The new Firefox 20 has not only been released for
desktop systems – including Windows, OS X and Linux – but also for
Android, albeit with a slightly different change log. Let’s take a look
at what’s new and improved just past the fold.
In a nutshell, the enhancements circle around private browsing
sessions on a per-window basis (something that Chrome has had for a
while now), a much neater and functional download manager, and isolated
handling of plugins, so that the faulty ones can be shut down without
actually needing to crash the whole browser. On the Android side, you
get per-tab private browsing, H.264/AAC/MP3 hardware decoder support for
Gingerbread and Honeycomb, as well as customization possibilities for
the Top Sites thumbnails
The complete change log for Desktop version of Firefox 20 goes thus:
- FIXED: Security fixes can be found here.
- NEW: Per-window Private Browsing. Learn more.
- NEW: New download experience. Learn more.
- NEW: Ability to close hanging plugins, without the browser hanging.
- CHANGED: Continued performance improvements around common browser tasks (page loads, downloads, shutdown, etc.).
- DEVELOPER: Continued implementation of draft ECMAScript 6 –clear() and Math.imul.
- DEVELOPER: New JavaScript Profiler tool.
- HTML5: getUserMedia implemented for web access to the user’s camera and microphone (with user permission).
- HTML5: <canvas> now supports blend modes.
- HTML5: Various <audio> and <video> improvements.
- FIXED: Details button on Crash Reporter
(793972). - FIXED: Unity plugin doesn’t display in HiDPI mode
(829284)
The new Download Manager is something of a particular interest, since
the previous offering by Firefox was pretty much a joke, to say the
least. First, the download manager seems to adapt certain elements from
iTunes 11, following an approach similar to iTunes’ downward arrow to
take a quick glance at currently ongoing downloads. An in-progress
download changes the arrow to a progress bar, indicating the time
remaining above the bar as well.
The actual download manager has been improved to give a very detailed
overview of what you’ve downloaded and when, along side the capability
to sort your items, quickly open the downloaded files’ location in
Explorer, remove an entry from the list etc., using the new Library
panel. The same panel also bundles History, Bookmarks and Tags.
Naturally, there are quite a few backend improvements as well, and
while I haven’t tested Firefox 20 under heavy tab-load (the way I treat
Chrome), the browser does seem even faster than before.
Firefox 20 for Windows, Linux and OS X can be obtained at the
official Mozilla Firefox website, or through the update release channel
if you already have the browser installed. Android version is available
through the Google Play Store.
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