12 Results for firefox

Firefox Market Share Numbers Vary, But it Appears to Be Tops in Europe

Most people are aware that Mozilla's Firefox browser has over 20 percent market share at this point, with the latest data from NetApps showing it at 21.77 percent share. However, not everyone is aware of how dominant the browser has become in certain parts of the world, especially Europe, and it's surprising how skewed browser market share citations get across the many sites that report data. Here are a few different slices on Firefox's market share from various sources, including one showing it as the top browser in Europe. You can pick which one to believe.


The Quick Firefox Fix Jumps Over the Lazy Weekend

Just last Thursday, I wrote a post proclaiming my undying love for how quickly open source projects tend to right themselves when sailing the choppy waters of software vulnerabilities. This time around, a vulnerability had been spotted in Firefox, affecting 3.x releases on all platforms. The fix was scheduled for release sometime this week, in the browser's 3.0.8 version.

Firefox 3.0.8 made an early arrival, however, and was officially released Friday afternoon (at 3:45 PST). For those keeping score, this was roughly two days after one of the vulnerabilities it patches was discovered.



OStatic's 8 Most Popular Open Source Resource Collections

Since OStatic's inception, we've done regular roundups on everything from the best Firefox extensions, to free books on open source topics, to top FOSS applications for working with video and digital music. Many of these are good ways to dive into open source applications, plug-ins and communities that you may not know about. In case you missed any of these or are new to the site, here are the eight most popular roundups we've done, including hundreds of our favorite apps and extensions.


Next Week's Firefox 3.0.8 Release Termed "High-Priority Firedrill"

There are many reasons to love the open source approach. The events chronicled in an article on NetworkWorld surrounding an exploit affecting Firefox outlines, quite elegantly, how open code outwardly appears risky, and -- well, wide open -- and how that same quality generates faster fixes and stronger applications.

A security researcher discovered that Firefox is vulnerable to remote memory corruption, enabling attackers to execute malicious (or at least very much unauthorized) code within the context of the browser. While security researchers spend countless hours searching out bugs and vulnerabilities, it's not usually the case that the offending attack finds its way into the public eye. Yesterday, however, this little exploit was published on several security sites. The vulnerability affects Firefox versions 3.0 through 3.0.7, on all platforms. In less than 24 hours, developers issued a patch for the vulnerability, to be included in next week's 3.0.8 release.



Lessons from Mozilla's Design Challenge Video Tutorials

Mozilla has posted an update on the Design Challenge it has been running, which focuses on new design ideas not only for Firefox and Mozilla projects, but design for all types of open source projects. One of the centerpieces of the initiative is a series of tutorial videos posted on the Design Challenge site. A few of the videos will definitely be of interest to developers or prospective developers. Here's what you'll find.


Ask Not -- The Bell Is Not Tolling for Firefox Yet

Late last week, Sam took a close look at the rapidly changing browser landscape. In one of the posts linked therein, Keir Thomas speculates that Firefox may well have just given up the ghost, what with an alpha version of Chrome now being available for Linux (or, at the very least, Ubuntu).

I don't think it is, nor is it going to be, quite that easy. Firefox isn't without issue -- or momentum. And Chrome for Linux? In all reality, it doesn't exist, yet. Chrome may have a number of advantages over other browsers, including Firefox, on other platforms. But if it's still too early to call this fight on Windows, declaring the superior browser on Linux is pretty much a coin toss.



The Browser Competition Heats Up: Notes from this Week

Few corners of the software world are witnessing as much fierce competition as the browser market. Microsoft's Internet Explorer is continuing to drop in market share, ?and although the company's new version 8 of IE has many improvements, Walt Mossberg and others are finding that it's not as fast as Firefox, Chrome or Safari. I remain loyal to Firefox because of the incredible extensions that I can use with it, but I'm actually using all the major browsers, including Opera. Amidst all the competition, here are some findings I took note of this week, regarding Chrome, IE, Firefox and Opera.


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Firefox 3.1 Beta 3 now available. It has an improved Private Browsing Mode, the new TraceMonkey JavaScript engine, and more. Get it here.

Mozilla contemplates a future without Google. Could it get more millions from another search partner than it currently gets from Google?

T-Mobile G1 fire sale. Get an Android phone for under $80.

Adium gets its Twitter on in version 1.4. The great open source, multiprotocol Mac instant-messaging app is tackling solid Twitter functionality.

6 ways to connect Linux to the outside world that are not wireless, Bluetooth, or Ethernet. It can be done.

The ABC's of PHP. How to get started with it.



Firefox "New Tab" Extension Bypasses the Blank Page

Mozilla Lab

I love the tabbed browsing feature in Firefox so much that it's not uncommon for me to have upwards of 20 open at a time. Unfortunately, several of them are often blank pages because I've forgotten where I was planning to go once I open them.

I've always wished that Firefox would intuitively know that if I highlight an address on a Web page and open a new tab, it's probably because I want to map it. Apparently, I'm not the only one longing for that feature. Mozilla is developing an extension that takes its best guesses about why you've opened a new tab in your Firefox browser.



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Ubuntu newbie guide. Pre-installation tips, post-installation techniques, and more.

Open source usability: Joomla! vs. WordPress. A head-to-head comparison of content managers.

What Obama could learn from Mozilla. How can we focus our government on policies, not politics? Mozilla has clues.

The coming merger of netbooks and handhelds. With Android moving into netbooks, should we expect synergy between netbooks and handhelds?

Firefox 3.1: Not coming until the second quarter? TraceMonkey tests and fixes still loom. Will it ship with it?



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