Posts Tagged ‘Firefox’

New Firefox beta offers audio API, menu tweaks

September 8th, 2010

The fifth Firefox 4 beta makes some small feature changes to the in-development browser, bringing a new audio API to the table, revamping its menu, and turning on hardware acceleration by default. Available for Windows,Mac, and Linux, Firefox 4 beta 5 continues Mozilla’s new beta release schedule, marked by more frequent releases and smaller feature revisions per update.

The most visual change to the beta is the redone menu in the Windows version, which returns a lot of functionality that had been missing from the menu in previous betas. The single-column menu has been replaced with a two-tiered, two-colored menu. The locally stored Help menu options have returned, and the add-ons menu is available in a tweaked color scheme as a secondary window again, too. Cut, copy, and paste have returned to the menu in icon-only form, and more of Firefox’s feature managers, such as bookmarks, history, and the Options menu, have their previous access options restored.

The audio data API is an under-the-hood coding option that gives programmers the ability to “interact with sound…in all the creative ways that video and images allow,” according to a blog post by Mozilla’s director of Firefox, Mike Beltzner. The API will allow developers to expose raw audio data, display the data visual using the HTML5 tag, calculate and visual demonstrate audio spectrum, apply audio filters, and other visual representations of the audio content.

Source:-http://download.cnet.com/8301-2007_4-20015769-12.html

Firefox Friday – not such a great week for the Fox, but the future looks good

September 3rd, 2010

Hi there, Firefox fans. The esteemed Mr. Anthony is out this weekend, so I’m your host for today’s Firefox Friday. Sad to say, things aren’t looking too fantastic for Firefox at the moment.

Before he left, Sebastian ran a comparison of the hardware acceleration in modern browsers, and Mozilla’s baby was lagging in last place. Browser growth was also stagnant for Firefox in August, according to this month’s numbers.

There might be brighter times on the horizon for Firefox, though, considering the new beta features that Seb covered last week. Anyway, let’s get down to it!

Source:-http://www.downloadsquad.com/2010/09/03/firefox-friday-not-such-a-great-week-for-the-fox-but-the-futu/

New Firefox 4 beta unveils tab manager, sync

August 25th, 2010

Mozilla on Tuesday launched the fourth beta of Firefox 4, adding bookmark and password synchronization, and revamping how people wrestle tabs.

The latest build also sported the first attempt at accelerating Firefox 4’s page rendering by tapping the graphics processor. The hardware acceleration, available only in Windows Vista and Windows 7, is disabled by default.

Firefox 4 Beta 4’s most visible addition is “Panorama,” a new name for what Mozilla had been calling “Tab Candy.” Largely driven by the work of Aza Raskin, creative lead of Firefox, Panorama lets users collect tabs into sets, graphically displays those sets, and when users open a tab, shows only those tabs within the group.

Mozilla, which calls Panorama a tab manager, has argued that it’s the next step in the evolution of tabs.

Firefox’s rivals have nothing like Panorama. Apple, for example, introduced “Top Sites” to Safari last year, while Google’s Chrome has had a similar “Most Visited” feature since it launched in 2008. But both simply graphically represent frequently-visited sites using thumbnails.

Microsoft has not revealed the user interface or how it will use tabs in its next browser, Internet Explorer 9 (IE9), which is scheduled to ship as a beta on Sept 15.

Firefox Sync, the other major feature new to Beta 4, is not new to Mozilla: The service that keeps bookmarks, passwords, browser history, open tabs and other data consistent across multiple computers and devices traces its roots to 2007 and a project then dubbed Weave.

Sync has been available to users of earlier Firefox editions through an add-on and to iPhone owners via the free Firefow Home app, but this is the first time that the functionality has been baked into the browser.

Chrome and Opera have had integrated synchronization since 2008.

Mozilla also debuted hardware acceleration in Beta 4, but left the Windows-only feature turned off. To switch it on, users must edit the browser’s “about:config” file using instructions Mozilla has posted on its site.

Firefox 4, like IE9, relies on Windows’ Direct2D API (application programming interface) to boost rendering speeds by shifting some chores from the computer’s central processor to the graphics processor.

Microsoft’s made hardware acceleration a prominent part of its IE9 pitch, and rivals have started to react. Firefox, however, is the first browser to debut the technology in a beta-or-better build.

Hardware acceleration in Firefox 4 requires Windows Vista or Windows 7; the more popular Windows XP lacks the necessary graphics infrastructure, a fact that’s prompted Microsoft to drop XP from IE9’s supported operating systems.

Mozilla has set an aggressive schedule for Firefox 4, with a tentative release candidate slated for October and final ship date in November. According to meeting notes posted Tuesday, the current plan is to feature-freeze the browser Sept. 10, and issue a feature-complete Beta 6 later next month.

Source:http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9181761/New_Firefox_4_beta_unveils_tab_manager_sync

Firefox 4 b4 bringing direct2d gpu acceleration

August 20th, 2010

Adventurous Firefox fans, there’s a new beta coming on Monday that’ll add a couple considerable features.

he fourth beta of Firefox 4 will be hitting on Monday, and notable will be the inclusion of hardware acceleration for Windows users that have the hardware and software to support Direct2D.

Firefox using your GPU to render won’t be on by default – at least not yet. Mozilla’s VP of engineering tweeted that Direct2D will be included in beta 4, but it isn’t quite ready for everyone to be running it yet. Instead, the feature will be enabled through user intervention by modifying the config.

Source:-http://www.tomshardware.com/news/firefox-mozilla-direct2d-gpu-acceleration,11122.html

Firefox 4 beta 4 gets GPU acceleration

August 20th, 2010

A HOST OF GOODIES have been announced by Mozilla in the beta 4 version of Firefox 4, including GPU acceleration.The open source software outfit revealed the updates in its online minutes report and set a release date for this next beta version of next Monday. The beta bump comes a mere couple of weeks after multi-touch support was addressed in beta 3 for “intuitive fun and browsing”, no less.
Hardware GPU acceleration is being coded into nearly every web browser so this announcement isn’t too much of a surprise.

Hardware acceleration of video and other HTML and SVG content, as well as user interface, on by default for compatible hardware on all Tier-1 desktop and mobile platforms,” blogged the Mozzarella Firebadger 4 development team.

Also getting an update is speedier Javascript benchmarking for Chrome users, making the browser 20 per cent faster. That might not sound like much but, with hardware acceleration taking care of resource intensive websites, it could make the difference between a good user experience and throwing coffee at your display.

Mozilla has already moved the user interface to the user friendly tabbed interface but tab candy is also going live in Firefox beta 4. The team said it has landed but that there’s “lots of follow up work to do on interactions, integration with other features.

Tab candy is apparently similar to Apple Safari’s Expose feature mixed with its Spaces feature. That lets you zoom out to a bird’s-eye-view of all windows so you can re-arrange them. Tab candy does this with tabs rather than windows so punters can organise them into groups.

Source:-http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/news/1728985/firefox-beta-gpu-acceleration

Firesay adds simple voice navigation to Firefox

August 20th, 2010

Voice navigation is now commonplace on modern-day Android devices, but on the desktop, many of the accessibility tools that would bring voice commands to the end user still require special system level software or customized hardware.

That’s not the case with a new Firefox add-on called Firesay, which brings hands-free voice controls to just the browser. Once installed as an add-on, it can pick up voice commands to do Web searches, open and close sites, and even pull up TV shows on Hulu.

The number of commands, and sites users can visit is extremely limited for the time being. You can, for instance, only open up a handful of Web sites and TV shows, as long as they’re in the list of those that have been programmed in. Though the add-on is able to recognize and transcribe voice commands for its Web search feature. The add-on also requires that the user is on Windows 7, leaving XP, Vista, and Mac OS users behind.

One very cool feature is the option to open up a new site in the background of another tab, which normally requires: the link be coded that way, a special mouse click, or the use of a contextual menu within the browser. Firesay’s solution is to have the user say “multitask” in front of a site’s name, which opens it up and lets it load in an adjacent tab. The same behavior is used to do Web searches, which for now, are all done through Google.

Firesay’s creators say future versions will bring voice recognition that is more easily able to pull out words from a noisy room. To some degree, Google has gotten around this problem on the mobile side by making use of noise cancellation hardware on the phone and software algorithms within the Android OS. On the desktop side of things, Firesay is simply suggesting that users invest in a microphone with noise cancellation built-in.

Source:-http://news.cnet.com/8301-27076_3-20014191-248.html

Firefox 4 beta 4 to enable hardware acceleration for Windows users

August 19th, 2010

If you’ve enjoyed mucking around with the beta builds of Firefox 4, you might want to pay close attention to the next release. Slated to drop on Monday, Firefox 4 beta 4 will enable hardware-accelerated graphics for some Windows users. As CNET explains, “Hardware acceleration [...] is designed to shift some tasks from a computer’s main processor to its graphics processor. One way Firefox is tackling the technology is by using Windows’ Direct2D interface, which can speed up the display of text and graphics on newer versions of Windows.” The feature will be off by default, but you can enable it.

The ability to group tabs into “tab sets” is also scheduled to be available in beta 4. Anyone out there using Firefox 4 beta as their primary browser?

Source:http://www.boygeniusreport.com/2010/08/19/firefox-4-beta-4-to-enable-hardware-acceleration-for-windows-users/

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