Mozilla Plans To Remove Support For Firefox Complete Themes 267
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.
Always seemed redundant to me. (Score:5, Insightful)
We already have gui toolkit theming, why do we also need individual application theming?
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So... why are you still using Firefox?
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Ever tried to have a hundred tabs open in chrome?
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Just because you can have 100 open tabs doesn't make it practical. You can only read one book at a time. What is the point of having that many? By the time you hit tab 73 you have no idea what tab 22 was about.
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And where did this "Great or Dead" come from? I thought it was Great and Dead, i.e. Firefox was Great some years ago and has been rapidly moving towards Dead ever since the 3.x releases.
(Firefox user since Phoenix 0.3, and the sole reason I'm still using it is the plugins. Fortunately Mozilla have announced that they'll be removing this reason soon).
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I am SO VERY tired of hacking profiles, extensions, and theme files every 3-4 weeks to get them to keep working. I am tired of the never-ending Gypsy Switch.
I've used almost nothing but mainline Firefox since before it was Firefox (Mozilla Phoenix 0.6, late 2000--and my original profile that I've been migrating all these years dates back to Netscape 2.0 ca 1995). I've been stubborn as hell about sticking with it.
Because I WANTED TO BELIEVE, but fuck that noise.
I want to BELIEVE but at the end of the day I n
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Re:Always seemed redundant to me. (Score:5, Informative)
They keep copying Chrome anyway so what’s the point of using a bloated browser that tries to mimic Chrome?
For me, it's the amazing Tree Style Tab extension that keeps me on Firefox more than anything else. Chrome seems to have no intention to ever implement this.
As for getting rid of theme support ... from my perspective I'm all for it. 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.
Re:Always seemed redundant to me. (Score:4, Informative)
The good news, they're getting rid of bloat, things such as xul. The bad news, no more xul based extensions (most all) so no more Tree Style Tab extension so all users who stick with Mozilla for the extensions won't have an excuse to not move to a different browser.
They seem determined to reduce the user base to 0%
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Can it not be possible to re-implement tree style tabs as an HTML5 web ext?
If XUL is going away it's because neither Fx OS nor Servo will support it if a complex UI is to be rendered in pure HTML/CSS/JS.
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Possibly, it really depends on how much of the internals are exposed and whether the add-on developer wants to start all over.
We'll have to wait and see what choices Mozilla makes going forward though I do notice that the other browsers don't have anywhere near the add-on ecology, likely due to the add-ons having to use pure HTML/CSS/JS rather then lower level stuff.
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For what it's worth, that's been discussed here:
https://billmccloskey.wordpres... [wordpress.com]
Although the official response seems to be along the lines of -- well, we'll add an API that would kinda allow the same thing, more or less. Whether or not that actually encourages a dev to rewrite their entire, very mature, extension from scratch again remains to be seen. My guess on the latter is that it won't happen :(
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Yeah, getting rid of XUL is sad times. I'm still hoping it won't happen -- there's been a pretty major developer backlash about that one.
(Obviously, when I said "get rid of the bloat", I meant only the bloat that wasn't useful to me ... :)
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Don't forget to nix the built-in "Pocket" addon.
Re:Always seemed redundant to me. (Score:4, Insightful)
I think GP is talking about the sponsored start page and pocket integration. Pocket is the worst.
Re: Always seemed redundant to me. (Score:3)
Copy-on-select prevents you from doing paste-as-replace limiting you to the stupidly inefficient paste-as-insert
Agree (Score:2, Insightful)
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.
Re:Agree (Score:5, Insightful)
FF still ignores OS themes, making their special "complete themes" necessary for many people. And I do mean "necessary"...
I like to read at night without having to turn display brightness to nearly zero (which is still too bright and makes everything look like dishwater). Even if I use an extension like BYM to darken web pages, I still have the FF GUI blaring at my eyes. The solution is to use an addon like DeepDark to tame the UI.
Now I'll have a browser that neither honors my Gnome dark theme setting, nor honors its own custom dark theme. THAT is a clusterf*ck.
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I tried to pull up that extension and was greeted to a EULA. Is this common now? The only addon I use noscript - figured if I wanted to complain that ads are evil because of the insecure scripts then I should start just blocking ads that use scripts
I just tried tab tree based on another post here, so I guess that makes two.
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Too bad I already already posted in this thread. Notwithstanding that, here's your complimentary -1, Fuck You, Your Condescending Attitude, And The Horse You Both Rode In On
Re:Agree (Score:5, Insightful)
And Hello?
And the fucking proprietary DRM and media shit?
And the "about:newtab" shit that shows you your top visited sites, and "recommended" sites?
All of that shit should be nuked from the code base, and everyone involved should be stripped naked, tied to a tree in the woods, and have their genitals coated in honey.
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You mean the garbage they keep adding, like pocket?
I specifically claim to mention this. Removing Pocket should be the first thing on their list.
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While I agree Pocket is pointless, was it really bloating up the codebase that much? Genuinely curious ...
Re:Agree (Score:5, Insightful)
They already announced that Pocket will be removed. Not removed, but placed inside its own add-on. http://webscripts.softpedia.com/blog/mozilla-to-move-pocket-integration-to-a-standalone-firefox-add-on-495871.shtml
That is awesome news! Moving integrated add-ons like Pocket to "featured add-ons" is a great idea! Keep the core browser lean and mean. Like it was meant to be.
Firefox is unuseable (Score:2)
Time to go back to the tried and true sensible interface that is SeaMonkey.
FF developer edition is nice too (Score:3)
SM FTW! (Score:2)
I still use the suite products, like SeaMonkey, since Netscape v3.x days. :)
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Does it support all the extensions? I thought that was about the whole point of using Firefox lately. That, and sometimes it behaves better in terms of resources, but this varies depending on the system and workload.
Supports most of the Firefox and Thunderbird extensions. Here's an automatic extension converter, http://addonconverter.fotokrai... [fotokraina.com]
In terms of resources, I find SeaMonkey to actually be lighter, even with the included mail, newsgroups and IRC clients. It is also much better for Granny and other people who like a consistent interface and can even be themed to look like Firefox 3. Of course it depends on the same Gecko engine as Firefox so when Mozilla gets rid of themes and extensions, SeaMonkey will probabl
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Would these be the same patriarchal defaults that look like they were designed by and for 3-year-olds?
Storm in a glas of water (Score:3, Interesting)
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.
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So you basically want Chrome then?
Re: Storm in a glas of water (Score:3)
Most people just want to use their browser. Almost everyone I know uses Firefox mostly because IE sucked so much in the past. And they do not play around with themes. They might install icon sets, but only at home.
I know geeks like to configure everything and that is OK , but it is not what matters for the majority of users.
And no I do not want to use the Google sees it all tool for obvious reasons.
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People are going to look strange at me for saying this but i've been rather impressed with the edge browser that came with windows 10. It's fast for casual browsing. I still load firefox when I need with more muscle but just quick look ups edge seems to be what I go with.
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Why would we look strange at you for using edge? I went through your history for the past few months. Short of disliking silverlight, you seem to very much like windows. Why would we expect you not to like this?
Well I do like windows but I also like linux. I run windows on my home workstation because when because with what I do at home windows works better the. Mainly games.
I run linux, centos 6.7, on my server. It works best for that what I use it for. Basically a big ass file server.
I run fedora at work because I view it as the best OS to use when working in a linux environment.
Re: Storm in a glas of water (Score:4, Insightful)
Most people just want to use their browser. Almost everyone I know uses Firefox mostly because IE sucked so much in the past. And they do not play around with themes. They might install icon sets, but only at home.
I know geeks like to configure everything and that is OK , but it is not what matters for the majority of users.
And no I do not want to use the Google sees it all tool for obvious reasons.
The great number of useful extensions is my own main reason for using Firefox. I also have Chromium and Konqueror installed but I hardly ever use them.
The Web is just too shitty of a general experience to use any browser without a good ad blocker. The many, many other available extensions is just icing on the cake.
Re:Storm in a glas of water (Score:4, Interesting)
Does "basically want Chrome then" mean "don't want a browser which tries to put 10 pounds of shit in a 5 pound bag"?
Because the answer is overwhelmingly "oh hell yes".
If Firefox is differentiating itself by adding features most people don't want or use, they're doing it wrong.
So many features added to browsers these days leave me immediately thinking "How do I disable this crap?".
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So just because a browser doesn't match your personal preferences, it's shit?
Because not everyone wants lightweight browser. Those who do can use Chrome. It's already cornered the lightweight browser market, and a non-profit like Mozilla is not going to be able to oust one of the most profitable tech companies in the world from a market that it has dominated for years.
Mozilla doesn't seem to have any real sense of strategy beyond "let's do what Chrome does", but they don't understand that people who like Ch
Pocket... WebRTC... Hello chat thing (Score:2)
I hope I haven't missed anything else as offensive as these.
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How does not having a use for themes equate to wanting Chrome? Underneath they are still very different browsers.
I can tell you what I don't want, custom themed apps. I remember the abomination that was the early 00s where we had windows of all different sizes, shapes and colours. Is it too hard to have software simply respect the default OS?
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How does not having a use for themes equate to wanting Chrome? Underneath they are still very different browsers.
Most users couldn't care less about whether their browser is written in C or C++ or with Gecko or Blink.
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I normally don't play around with themes too much but I do have the Classic Theme Restorer plug-in installed. I wonder if they are doing this just to kill off this type of plug-in and force everyone onto their new interface. I wouldn't put it past them.
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That was my first, second and third thought. I don't generally bother with themes as such, but Classic Theme Restorer is what has kept me from switching to Palemoon or Seamonkey as it currently provides the best of both worlds - access to the huge library of Firefox plugins and the occasional useful innovation in the core browser, with an interface I can make look like a subtly updated 3.x (for me the high point of FF interface design). CTR is an extension rather than a theme, but I assume it hooks into the
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It's crazy what the leadership is doing...get rid of their plug-in architecture (so that advantage is smashed), get rid of the UI customization (so that advantage is smashed)...eventually all we'll have left is Chrome with a different web engine. This must be what its like when the marketshare water is goin
Re: Storm in a glas of water (Score:2)
Try Pale Moon if that is what you are looking for. I think the Fork started in the early v20s of Firefox. It doesn't have the new UI crap in it.
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I switched after FF's last UI revision. I love it.
www.palemoon.org/
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Not really an option since the Mac version doesn't exist and isn't being maintained.
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So when Firefox releases yet another version, and the buttons and tabs and other stuff you "never configure" have been moved around and start acting differently, yet again, you're OK with that?
Or is that when you might actually want to configure your browser and put all the stuff back the way you like it ? Because this is exactly what you have to do if you "hardly ever configure something in [your] browser so it looks different".
That is exactly what they're going to break...your ability to keep the brow
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Themes go heaps further than what colour the buttons are.
Themes are (or were) our way of undoing self-serving/short-sighted UI changes otherwise forced down our throats.
Or maybe you missed it when, for example, some tool at Mozilla decided that since he didn't like the status bar, no-one was going to have one anymore...?
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In Europe, especially in Germany, many people use Firefox, because it is not MS and it does not suck like IE. And they are a lot of people. So to stay in the game not being replaced by the new MS browser, you have to provide a fast and responsive behavior of your browser. Firefox can do that, if they want. And from their post, it looks like that is direction they are going.
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No I do not. Why should I even try to remember it? I also do not want to remember Mosaic. Beside nostalgic feelings and the lie that everything was better than and rude behavior on the net was reserved for alt.* , there is no need for it. If you want a new UI, write your own. You can use the gecko engine and plug it into your UI of choice. Fiddling around with icons and button positions is not going to help. You could even fork their UI and replace the bad preference dialog jungle. For an end user, however
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I'm not interested in "working with the software". The software should be working for ME, not the other way round.
Can I get just a browser? (Score:5, Interesting)
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.
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If they do it well then maybe they'll get one user back and I can make the move to putting GhostBSD on bare metal.
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Pale Moon. Doesn't support every Firefox plugin, but most of the important ones work. It switch to chromium.
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Hard as crap to netflix on Pale Moon (this is 1000% Netflix's fault), but generally a solid experience otherwise.
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Or Netscape Navigator!
It's becoming quite obvious that Firefox and Chrome have become assimilated. Chrome and Firefox will become Internet Explorer 2.0- the browser you use when you need to access content that uses obsolete crap, like how Netflix can't stream to Linux without blah blah or how you will probably need Firefox to run Java applets. But I'm pretty sure we'll see a lot of people jumping to Pale Moon, and there's several chromium derivatives that should at some point be relevant enough to point t
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Seamonkey? (Score:2)
Firefox long term strategy (Score:5, Funny)
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!
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They're in a shitty spot. Their once very-fast-market-dominating browser has become very slow in recent years, and lost a lot of reputation with non-technical people.
So what can they do, leave the browser (and their ever declining market share) as-is, and have a slow (but very customizable) browser, or start cutting out features to try and create a more manageable product which is hopefully also faster to try and compete with Chrome.
This entire situation is a really good example of what exactly the trade-of
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These trade-offs are mitigated with expressive and potentially vast extensibility mechanisms. Firefox seems to already have a very good trade-off between ease-of-use and extensibility, but gutting extensibility for real or perceived efficiency gains seems problematic.
I think the more likely cause for the removal is that someone has to maintain compatibility with the component and its a hassle to do so. I assume that instead of plugging efficiency gaps, they're using perf loss as an excuse to remove the comp
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I think you're probably right. I think the real reason is just maintainability. I think by reducing the code, it will make it easier to maintain as well as try to find performance gains in general. Technically they can find it without removing the code, but it's much easier with a smaller code base. I'm also assuming their funding / team size has decreased in the recent years (I have no idea if it did), and this might be related?
At the very least, it's a good way to get morale of developers up when you star
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I find Firefox very difficult to use these days, and their debugger console is a total mess (especially when it was Firebug before, and now it isn't) especially when you compare it to Chrome's.
I completely disagree. It's a lot better than it was in the firebug days, and a bit better than what Chrome offers. What do you think is better and why?
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I figured this relates to their effort to stop using their weird XUL system. The fewer parts of Firefox that are over a decade old, unused, and unmaintained, the better.
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To be fair, people have been moaning that Firefox is too bloated, but if they remove any bloat they get criticised. Being able to theme the whole ui seems a bit extravagant and not something that many people use.
Firefox has some serious issues that are limiting its performance. Web is a platform now, and the browser is the OS, so performance is critical. To fix these issues is going to be painful. I'm not saying that the UI redesigns were not a mistake, but some big changes are inevitable.
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I think the complaint has never been bloat
You don't have to go beyond the comments on this page to know that is false
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I think the complaint has never been bloat, but ridiculously high memory usage.
Only by idiots. Chrome has been the biggest memory hog for years now, using significantly more memory than FF. Yet the same yahoos that bash FF eagerly promote Chrome as a 'lightweight' alternative. It doesn't make any sense.
it does seem to be mindboggling how we've gone from browsers like Firefox 3.x, which I happily ran on a 128Mb (yes, megabyte) Slackware Linux laptop, with no apparent memory leakage and decent performance, to today's Firefox which seem to have added little in features, yet end up sucking gigabytes of memory on a regular basis.
As for memory usage and performance, you can thank modern web standards for a lot of that. Pages are heavier and more resource intensive than they were 10 years ago, and far more is expected of the browser. You'll want to include modern web standards when you're feature counting.
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Step 3: ???
For starters, and ahead of themes (?!), they have other problems to address: watching porn on FF is slow, on Chrome it's fine.
For once I agree (Score:2)
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. Yan
Re:For once I agree (Score:5, Informative)
Let's hope "video autoplay" is next!
about:config media.autoplay.enabled = false
There might be a UI method of getting to that but I couldn't find it in the five seconds I allocated to searching. Note this only stops HTML5 videos, but you really ought to have Flash set to click-to-enable (or disabled) for myriad other reasons.
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You're new here, aren't you?
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Thank you.
Please please (Score:4, Insightful)
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
Too much and too little (Score:2)
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?
A complete overreaction (Score:2, Insightful)
Asking for feedback. DECISION ALREADY MADE! (Score:2)
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
I use themes because FF is ugly by default (Score:2)
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 an
Does one mature out of over themeing? (Score:2)
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To be fair, 40 or 41 was a great leap forward in the leak department.. at long last.
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Not always [xkcd.com], it's a bit like "the customer is always right" and if you've worked in IT you'll know that sometimes the customer is horribly, horribly wrong and even if you did try to please them it would end up an unusable mess they wouldn't be happy with and they'd still blame you. That said, I'd generally try to have replacement functionality up and running before I pull the plug on the old solution, I know how saying you'll get those features back later works when other things keep taking priority.
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Yes. Yes, I am part of the problem - I have absofuckinglutely no interest in trying to hunt down new plugins once a quarter to replace still-functional old ones that do exactly what I want.
Adding support for new web technologies doesn't require completely revamping the look and feel of the browser or breaking the plugin system every other release.
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How much updating does a theme need, really? It's, like, different icons for the buttons. (I've used my preferred theme for many years and never had to "update" it.)
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I don't understand why this is even in the core code. The core code should contain only the essentials to make the browser function. Anything else such as themes, adblockers, chat clients, and fucking social buttons should be downloadable add ins.
If you want a fast and sleek broswer just keep the core code. You want to customize the hell out of it go fo it,and enjoy your lumbering hippo.
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Themes do need to be downloaded and replacing the default theme is pretty trivial as most all the UI is a theme (CSS and bitmaps) and part of the core, at least currently.
But don't worry, the long term plan seems to get rid of all customization, things like add-ons including add-blockers take having support in the main code base so will be removed and you will get a browser that acts exactly like the Mozilla Foundation wants rather then how the user wants
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I can't argue with that logic. Agree.
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Ssssooooo, Firefox is essentially turning into Opera Browser then??
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How has that been working for Opera? Not well, you say? [theregister.co.uk]
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No they found someone to steer. Unfortunately it was Captain Peter Wrongway Peachfuzz
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
Seriously though why would anyone think this was a good idea?
On that note why does google not allow me the option to use the desktop site on mobile and sometimes not even on desktop?!
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Video without a flash plugin is okay.
What *is* daft is autoplay. There seems to be no way to disable it and every click-bait link fires up some shitty ad.
Maybe that can be disabled via no-script or some such but I'd prefer click to play.