Mozilla Plans To Remove Support For Firefox Complete Themes
AmiMoJo writes: Mozilla's engineers have announced the removal of Firefox complete themes as a way to lighten the browser core and remove a feature they don't see as heavily used any more. "Personas", or lightweight themes that are basically just wallpaper images, will remain. The Firefox community did not respond well to this piece of news, most seeing it as the engineers "chromifying Firefox." The change is part of Mozilla's Great-or-Dead initiative, which plans to simplify the Firefox codebase and remove features that are not popular.
We already have gui toolkit theming, why do we also need individual application theming?
Look, if a few people are the only ones using a specific feature, and they can't live without it, fork the code. Don't continue to bloat the browser for the other 99% of users that would rather have a light, fast browser without this obscure feature.
I dont think anyone steering this ships.
Time to go back to the tried and true sensible interface that is SeaMonkey.
Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
Why not pocket, hello, all the donotrack shit that doesn't work, some of the dozens or about: screens, your fucked up search bar code, or the useless health report stuff.
Mozilla seems to be bent on taking away almost every customization feature (cosmetic and otherwise) and turn it into a knockoff of Chrome after destroying every feature that made it different. At this rate they should just re-badge Chromium and call it a day.
Really, themes are an important feature? I hardly ever configure something in my browser so it looks different. I might do so if I find something annoying, like this chat thing they included several releases ago. I want a working browser. It should be fast and stable. And I want to share bookmarks and the keyring in a save way between all my accounts. True the tool should be able to use the icons of the specific host OS or UI framework, but beyond that. I do not see the need of some extra theming stuff.
Can I get a version which doesn't have social network tie-ins, isn't a mail client, doesn't have its own chat, make it easy to block ads and other crap, doesn't spy on me, and doesn't otherwise think it's going to be the center of my damned universe?
Because that would be awesome.
Probably never gonna happen, but it would be awesome.
Lost at C:>. Found at C.
No, Mozilla is not planning to remove support for "complete themes". They plan on removing support for the way they're currently implemented, which is godawful. Frankly it's about damn time, as anyone who has had the misfortune of writing a theme and having it break all the time will tell you.
People really need to stop with the histrionics about Mozilla's recent decisions. They're the right choices, and the only problem is that they didn't make them many years ago. If you're so invested in crappy old addons and themes that aren't being kept up to date anyway, then you're frankly part of the problem.
So long, useless feature. Now, just get rid of Pocket, too, so I don't have to disable and hide it on a new install.
Step 1: Eschew everything that makes Firefox distinct from Chrome.
Step 2: Make an inferior clone of Chrome on a budget smaller than Google's sofa change.
Step 3: ???
Step 4: Overtake Chrome!
Everything else is redundant.
Having worked on a number of commercial projects, I'm proud of having pulled "custom themes" and other cruft out of about a half dozen shipping pieces of software. I've seen these features go in because 1) a lead developer wanted to play with a customization library 2) a key customer wanted the whole application in their corporate color or 3) product management thought people spent all day with their application maximized on the screen and needed to twiddle every button.
For once, I agree with Mozilla. Yanking customization like this is just what you need to do when a product grows up.
Keep up the "less features in Firefox" and I might even make it my primary browser again. Let's hope "video autoplay" is next!
"codebase and remove features that *they have decided* are not popular."
You know, like accessing https sites that are unauthorized by the Mozilla High Coucil for Security and Nannyism...
I wont miss something I never used.
Between calling toolbar backgrounds "themes", promoting them over complete themes and constantly and needlessly making theme breaking changes to the UI, it's a wonder that there still are complete themes around at all.
Can someone tell me if this actually affects me? Oh they removed some underlying feature. That is neither here nor there if its of truly marginal use or something that can be added back with Add-Ons. All this isn't clearly outlined in the comment or announcement, so here goes:
I have the following plugins. Which Add-Ons if any will be broken without any future fix after the deprecation?
- Classic Theme Restorer
- Add to Search Bar
- Adblock Plus
- Quick Search Bar
- Hard Refresh
- Flashblock
Bye!
http://i68.tinypic.com/rhjyoo.png
Look at all those white Mozillans rejoicing over the removal of another popular Firefox feature! This wouldn't have happened if Mozilla was a more diversified organization.
All the listless ones you describe will be using MS Edge before long, if not right now. If one wants default config, one uses default browser.
Anyway, Firefox is dead, long live Seamonkey. ;)
Try: https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/... With the screen dimmer extension this is pretty nice: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-... there is a few glitches with GTK + screen dimmer on linux, but it's way better than anything chrome has to offer which keeps blinking like crazy.
Mozilla has now reached a desperate point. It has caved to Apple's requirement for a WebKit rendering so Firefox app is really just another Safari clone. Yahoo is in dire need of an infusion which now seems to be coming from a outside group who will no doubt streamline with a bunch of cleaning house. So here is Mozilla at a do or die situation and deciding to kill off any uniqueness left from being a Chrome clone. Yet again the engineers choose to kill off yet another feature that separates Firefox from other browsers. Well, good luck with that Mozilla, I see you haven't yet stopped shooting yourself in the foot!
" - Firefox Developer Edition"
in *every* item in my task switcher list.
Just say FF or FF-DE, or none at all, just the title from the content. *I* know what app it is, and the icon makes it kinda obvious also.
Interesting to see all of the complaints now about removing little used features and reducing bloat.
The outrage here now is as great as I have seen in the past when FireFox was adding features and bloat.
Can we make up our minds?... or do we just like to whinge?
I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
This is actually a side effect of the other changes they are planning; particularly, the deprecation of XUL. The bug itself has comments dictating that they are not removing the concept entirely, but want to revamp it to fit the new architecture. Theoretically, a new theme system could be built under the new architecture.
I loved this.
"This is why I'm here asking for feedback."
But when given actual feedback.
"Sorry, the decision about this has already been made."
Not to mention that a new architecture for this can't be done yet because the new plugin setup isn't ready yet.
And anything else they do will be deprecated the second they kill XUL and the old plugin setup. Translation: Wasted time and effort.
Basically this has been a pattern at Mozilla for a good, long while now.
A bunch of these top-down decisions, without actually addressing their user-base FIRST.
Stupid non-browser features being added in.
Customization and ability to extend function being excised out.
"Oh. We're going to replace that."
But they don't have a single fucking line of code in place. They're just looking for "ideas" while they gut the browser of everything that makes it useful to people.
"Great or die" my ass. It's "be a Chrome also-ran or die".
I simply do not get why Mozilla is so set on slobbing the Chrome knob. As it relegates them to followers, utterly beholden to the whims of the Chrome crew. Rather than innovating the browser AS THEY SHOULD BE.
Just rename the damn browser to "Chomewannabezilla" and be fucking done with it.
Chas - The one, the only.
THANK GOD!!!
Well, if it comes to Firefox, I did:
1) Complain a lot for a while
2) Switch to Pale Moon
3) Donate once a year to Pale Moon
It's well worth it, having gone from feeling "Fuck!!! What have they broken this time!!" on every Browser update to "Hey, great, some little bugs have been fixed" on every Browser update.
Unique Selling Point. Ever heard of it? Products don't survive without one.
When people complain about bloat, they are talking about the things that have been integrated into the browser that should be plugins, like pocket. What everybody wants is an small, extensible browser, with as many features as possible abstracted into plugins. This will make it as fast or as slow as users want it to be, based on their selection of plugins. It would also give Mozilla a maintainable surface to support: a rendering engine, UI wrappers and plugin/extension APIs for those two components and that's it.
Instead they decided that they wanted to exit the browser business and get into the "Hey We're innovative" club. Except they aren't innovative. So yeah, they have a lot of crap to try to support with their browser-is-also-an-os mentality, and they've got to get rid of some of the crap. Inexplicably, they're keeping the crap and dumping their USP.
But the last theme I liked, and could actually install because the author hadn't abandoned, was for FF 3.5. I absolutely can't stand the default FF theme (which Australis made worse) and personas are useless. The complete theme concept has been deliberately allowed to atrophy over the last several years. The lack of updated complete themes is one of the reasons why I'm still using FF33 (and every time I upgrade I lose at least one extension I rely on).
When they yank XUL out, FF will cease to be useful and distinctive to me. Chrome isn't an option because it's been FF's model for stripping the UI, and I hate the developer tools interface.
If there is a is a wrong-headed choice, Mozilla proves yet again that they will invariably pick that one.
And not in a good way. Will be sad to see Firefox die like this.
RIP Firefox.
The change is part of Mozilla's Great-or-Dead initiative,
Only a Sith deals in absolutes.
I still use the suite products, like SeaMonkey, since Netscape v3.x days. :)
Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
which plans to simplify the Firefox codebase and remove features that are not popular
hello
pocket
sync
html5 video
Essentially, Mozilla (now Mozilla corp...) is dropping their XUL+XBL+CSS+JS UI framework. This allows themes, but it also allows functionality up to the level of entire applications. Thunderbird is quite dependent on this, and ask yourself this: Does an alternative extension mechanism named "WebExtensions" which is "Blink-compatible" going to work for non-browser XUL apps? For an answer, see this comment by Jorge Villalobos. They're basically saying future FIrefox code will not serve anything else other than their just-another-browser.
and nothing of importance was lost say the Devs.
This is true for me as I quit updating FF at LTS 10.0 since the only unfixed bug was blocked by NoScript and the extensions I have (Noscript, Tahoe Data Manager, Tree Style Tab) do what I want. This is my secure browser as I don't even have flash installed (no need for it any longer) and the LTS FF10.0 doesn't support HTML 5 (no need to worry about ads and such hijacking the damn thing like flash used to). For day to day use it's great and far more secure the the latest version.
If I need something that Google supports, I use Palemoon-x64 or IE11-x64 (I do have a 64bit OS so why not use a 64bit browser?)
I used to be a dedicated Firefox user. I liked the privacy, the security, and the extensibility. They purposefully spent time ignoring users and made their browser exactly like Chrome. Prior to that add-ons started dying because changes kept breaking add-ons and it became too hard for most people to maintain. After the terrible decision that was Austrailis, I jumped to Pale Moon and it's a great browser, but it has some issue with Netflix. So instead of going back to a Chrome clone, I just used Chrome. I'm not even mad at Mozilla, I'm just very sad that they've been utterly stupid in their design methodology, but I suppose all good things have to die sometime, and I think Mozilla has reached that time. They have no original ideas, they aren't all that secure, and they don't offer anything that isn't done better elsewhere and they seem intent on getting worse.
I hope I haven't missed anything else as offensive as these.
I wonder if (Firefox fork) Pale Moon will drop support too... I hope not, I always install a nice dark theme because I hate the glare from the monitor. As someone mentioned above, Firefox doesn't adopt the desktop UI theme (which would be preferable), so complete themes on the browser is the only way to cut the glare. Complete themes are a lifesaver!
As someone also mentioned above, there are so many other features they could cut first that actually carry alot more bloat.
The day they added the big overhaul with the new gui and the little 3x3 menu thing is the day I found the classic theme restorer addon. Why are they streamlining it so much? Isn't firefox for the savvy user? Isn't it supposed to have the most utility? Mozilla has their priorities wrong.
If you actually cared to read what the hell they were saying, it was: we've made the decision to remove the shitty heavyweight themes API and replace it with something better. We want your feedback to make sure we get something better that still does what you really need.
But hey, it's easier to just jump every possible shark, like the people who commented on the bug report before Mozilla even had a chance to properly chime in themselves on what they intended.
Honestly speaking, the Firefox fandom has truly become garbage-tier. I would actually prefer it if Mozilla really DID just ignore you childish asshats, so they could make a good browser without having to cater to your spoiled asses by supporting ancient APIs that make the browser a bloated piece of shit, just so a few of you can have ugly looking themes and piles of broken addons.
I remember when I had my first computer all to myself in college, and for about the first two or three years I'd get skins for different music players and whatnot, and spent a lot of time finding every which way I could customize/personalize every program. And now, it's more of a meh. Personally I feel like I "matured" out of the desire to completely overhaul the look of every program. I'm not saying that all personalization is bad, but there can be tasteful lines drawn. Plus, now that I code I'm aware of the potential overhead of a fully customizable system; and a lot of the times it just doesn't feel worth it.
Isn't that just Seamonkey? You even get plugin support (more or less). My little FF plugin works in Seamonkey with only a few minor differences.
Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
Cutting back the bloat and making Firefox faster and using less memory hungry is a good thing and losing theme support is fine by so long as the DEFAULT look they select is simple and maybe configurable in some way through Preferences, like a Colour Set drop-down where you can pick light, dark, fancy colour scheme...
I remember the original Phoenix 0.1 release, when the aim was to completely gut the Mozilla codebase of all bloat. It's about time that happened again.
Indeed, this is *the* *right* *way* (TM) to do it. (1) Start a new side project, do whatever your gut feelings tell you disregarding all the current user base. You can safely ignore them as long as they can safely ignore you. (2) If your stuff is worth it, people will migrate when *they* are ready (not when someone else decides that they should). Uh, and (3) profit, of course.
MOD THIS UP!!!!
If you go into a silly loop removing features that aren't used by 80% of your users, soon enough you'll have no users.
The real reason...
They realized that people are using Classic Theme Restorer, rather than "enjoying" the "experience" as intended.
Never mind that the "heavyweight" API was anything but.
And that most of the current themes were tiny and totally BURIED under about 400+ legacy themes for modern gems such as Firefox 2.0 and Firefox 3.6...
They removed it because it wasn't in heavy, regular use. It wasn't in heavy, regular use because Mozilla is total ass at project management.
And worse, they're doing it BEFORE even having some sort of viable replacement even in the planning stages, let alone implemented. Pretty much guaranteeing such a feature will remain an ill-documented, ill-maintained backwater.
And if you think chasing a feature-free toy like Chrome is the epitome of "making a good browser", you may as well be using Chrome. Since you're not actually using or doing anything that makes Mozilla worthwhile.
Chas - The one, the only.
THANK GOD!!!
They know that most people don't like the default look of their program, so just like Microsoft, they are going to force you to endure it. Look at the state of Microsoft Office 2013 - what bunch of idiots came up with the design? And why can't you just change it to whatever you want - i.e. increase the contrast of everything and change the colours? Because the designers' feelings will be hurt, that's why.
What about, you know, multithreading, multiprocess, sandoxing... you know... important things that would bring this browser in the 2000s.
Add feature few use to Firefox:
UGH! This is why Firefox is bad!!!
Keep feature few use in Firefox:
UGH! This is why Firefox is bad!!!
Remove feature few use from Firefox:
UGH! This is why Firefox is bad!!!
Kids, now you know what "telemetry" is good for. They are removing things only a bunch of nerds use.
I don't think it's that bad idea. I will be missing the possibility of the "classic theme", as the new look is terrible. I'm sticking with Safari just for the chrome look.
PS: As it seems to be mandatory on this thread, I've used Phoenix 0.x since it was the best browser available for a SunOS 2.7 workstation.
I asked the author of Classic Theme Restorer if it would stop working, he said it would have no effect on CTR.
Maxim: People cannot follow directions.
Increases in truth directly with the length of time spent explaining them
So, Mozilla thinks that they will have a better stand once they throw away all what made them unique and become as close to the Chrome experience as possible? Nice idea Mozilla, but sadly this will not bring over the tons of Chrome users of which you are dreaming. Instead it will lead to more power users switch away and leaving Mozilla in an even more dire spot in terms of being of importance for web designers!