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Firefox Mobile Reaches 1.0

Majix writes "Firefox Mobile, the mobile browser developed by Mozilla based on the same engine as in the recently released Firefox 3.6, has finally hit version 1.0. The first device to be officially supported is the Nokia N900. With a long list of features, Firefox Mobile looks to be the most complete mobile browser to date. Highlights include the familiar Awesome Bar, Weave Sync for sharing your browser state between your PC and mobile, and of course tabbed browsing and Firefox add-ons. With the Nokia 900 and Firefox Mobile 1.0, even Flash content including the normal YouTube site is working, showing that a mobile browser does not have to equal a compromised Internet experience."

12 of 198 comments (clear)

  1. Re:How about the iPad? by Nightspirit · · Score: 5, Informative

    "We do not have plans to build an iPhone browser due to constraints with the OS environment and distribution. "
    https://wiki.mozilla.org/Mobile/Platforms

  2. ??? Ok then... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Firefox Mobile looks to be the most complete mobile browser to date."

    Perhaps if you ignore Opera, Safari and Netfront.. Otherwise, from what I have seen, it mostly sucks pretty bad...

  3. Nokia N900 win by dcposch · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ...the N900 is an amazing platform. I know it from a computational photography class at my university: http://graphics.stanford.edu/courses/cs448a-10/ It runs a full Linux distro, has a 5MP camera, and now with FF 1.0 I consider it the first phone with a real browser. (IPhone/ITouch/IPad doesn't count because there's no flash and they don't support any browser extensions. Once I can run Flash, Firebug, and Adblock, then it's real.)

    I think it deserves a shoutout especially because
    *) Nokia is truly awful at promoting their products
    *) a certain company that's great at marketing is making all sorts of splash with the antithesis of this phone. it's called the iPad; it runs a Unix derivative, but is an affront to the Unix philosophy. it somehow manages to be three times the size of an N900 with a tenth the functionality.

    I think that N900 + FF Mobile is a real tool in an ocean of toys.

    1. Re:Nokia N900 win by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      Really? Because when I view Flash content, I get a message from Adobe saying that it's coming in early 2010. (Motorola Droid, Android 2.0.1)

    2. Re:Nokia N900 win by Dragonslicer · · Score: 3, Informative

      The N900 is nice, but the price is a bit off putting for the masses.

      The price only seems high because you can't get it subsidized by a carrier (at least as far as I know in the US). If you look at the regular retail prices of most Android phones and the iPhone, you'll find that they're in the same range as the N900. If you get service from T-Mobile, you can even save $10 per month if you don't get a subsidized phone, so if you put that $240 (or more, if you plan on keeping the phone more than two years), towards the price of the phone, it's the equivalent of a $300 subsidized phone.

  4. Re:Symbian by ducomputergeek · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It would never be allowed on the iPhone. Apple prohibits any apps that complete with their offerings. So no browsers other than Safari. That being said, why didn't they target blackberry first?

    --
    "The problem with socialism is eventually you run out of other people's money" - Thatcher.
  5. Re:How about the iPad? by Lifyre · · Score: 3, Insightful

    And he answered the GGP's question.

    --
    I'll meet you at the intersection of "Should be" and "Reality"
  6. Re:One device? by iammani · · Score: 4, Informative

    Not just one device, it is Firefox Maemo 1.0. Which means it can run any Nokia running Meamo 5.0. There are other versions which are in various stages of development. For eg, its in Alpha 3 for Windows Mobile 6.0.
    Check https://wiki.mozilla.org/Mobile/Platforms for more info

  7. You fail... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Um, you're confusing Opera Mini with Opera Mobile, which is a full browser.

  8. First impressions by dnaumov · · Score: 4, Informative

    The UI felt a bit unusual at the start, but I actually ended up liking it, felt unique and effective. The application start time is a few seconds slower than the Micro browser that ships with the N900, but page load and rendering speed seems toughly equal. The straightforwardness of installing and configuring AdBlocker felt more integrated and polished in the new Firefox 1.0. However, the Firefox has a major deal-breaker for me, it's broken ZOOM function. You're only limited to a "maximum zoom in" or "maximum zoom out" by doubletapping the screen, you can't pick your desired level of zoom by doing a clockwise/counterclockwise drag movement like in Micro. Ctrl-UP and Ctrl-DOWN were supposed keyboard shortcuts for zooming in and out, but these didn't even work at all, the key combinations did nothing (while other shortcuts like Ctrl-L worked normally). This definately feels like a good start, but it's more of a 0.98 version than a 1.0, it just has a few rough edges and needs some polish.

  9. Re:I want one... by EzInKy · · Score: 3, Informative

    I never even considered actually "buying" a cellphone. I basically only carried one for emergencies and was satisfied with whatever came with the service. That was until I heard about the N900. I've had mine for over a month now and I got to say, the thing just rocks and was worth every penny.

    Not only does it all the features you would expect from a smartphone such as web browsing, playing media, shooting pictures and video etc., but it also can receive and transmit FM radio and has TV out.

    As far as software goes, besides what's available in the standard, extras, and testing repos, after installing an "EasyDebian" chroot you can run just about anything on it. I haven't carried my laptop since I bought the thing.

    --
    Time is what keeps everything from happening all at once.
  10. Re:One device? by quenda · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Actually, it is worse. They support the one and only mobile phone which does not need it.
    The N900 already has an excellent mozilla-based web browser in MicroB. Fennec is very slow in comparison, and unlike to get much acceptance in it's current form.
    (what the n900 needs is a half-decent maps program, or a better mail client, or jave-ME, ... not another browser.)