Firefox Plans Mass Marketing Drive
Ivan Mark writes "Christopher Beard, the VP of products at Mozilla Corporation, told ZDNet UK on Monday that there is a 'strong likelihood' that Firefox 1.5, the next major version of the open source browser, will be released on 29 November. Beard said they are planning a 'big marketing push.'
'You will have real people telling you about Firefox's features-- what's cool and great,' said Beard. 'People can create the video and upload it to the Mozilla site. The video will then be reviewed and put on our Web site, with a link from their location.'"
I hate it to restart with all those tabs open.
Get SessionSaver.
It will restore your open tabs on startup or after a crash. It is also great for when one of the plugins (flash, java, or maybe just Firefox itself) makes the browser slow down over time; after a lot of usage you can just close it and reopen Firefox -- with all your tabs but a fresh start on memory usage. This extension has almost entirely eliminated the need for bookmarks for me too.
The Firemonger project is also boasting a lot of new features when it releases its FireFox & Thunderbird bundle. Just have a look at the cool new screenshots.
Turns out there's a great answer:
From http://weblogs.mozillazine.org/qa/archives/2005/10 /beta2_candidate_builds_availab.html
This is done by:1. Open new tab.
2. Go to "about:config".
3. Right-click, select New, Boolean.
4. Type the variable name, "config.trim_on_minimize", hit Enter.
5. Type "false", hit Enter.
6. Exit and restart Mozilla.
Now it won't free memory when it minimizes, which it generally takes 30-60 seconds (sometimes longer!) to restore when the user clicks on the task bar icon to bring it back up.
I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
In the (rare) occasions in which Firefox crashed on my Mac, Session Saver was a great helping hand (I don't use its automatic restore for every startup, just for browser crashes).
Don't know whether it restores data such as server-session-id cookies (which would be needed to salvage this insurance app incident, for example), but having such an option available as a plugin is what made me stick to Firefox in both Windows and Mac OS X.
1) being worked on (GRE runtime)
2) Firefox 1.5 supports incremental updates
3) name it
4) You don't have to. Mozilla keeps maintaining the suite (1.7), the Seamonkey project keeps improving the suite.
5) Multitasking.