RobertJ wrote:[Progress is a relative term not an absolute; FF57 is a change. Anyone who uses FF because of the ability to customize it via extensions or userChrome.css is unlikely to view it as progress.
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(Strange, I replied to this earlier today, but my post has disappeared.)
I've been using Firefox for a very long time. I remember that I stumbled on it in the Phoenix days. Later on I came to realise it was the successor to Netscape Navigator, something I choose because I liked the look of it. As time went on and as I took more of an interest in things I became greatly interested in helping to improve the browser. To cut a long story short, I was here from the seeing the fall of Internet Explorer to seeing Chrome become the new Internet Explorer. Privacy and freedom are my highest priorities but customisation remains important to me. The fact that they're going to provide UI for userChrome.css editing is something I'm really excited about since I use the CSS for the (Smart) Bookmarks Bar and also remove the search bar on about:newtab. As long as uBlock Origin, NoScript and Decentraleyes remain working I'll be happy. It would be nice to see Tab Groups, Duplicate Tabs Closer and DownThemAll continue working but they're not show stoppers for me. I suppose if people need more than that, then by all means be angry but if not, what's the point? In terms of theming, they done the right thing, listened to the community and committed to providing theming support, but add-ons... people were moaning about needing to make add-ons e10s compatible. The browser is modernising and there are some casualties. I fully acknowledge the right of add-on developers to be pissed about converting to WebExtentions so soon after e10s compatibility and Mozilla is at fault for not launching WebExtension support at that time, which would've given add-on developers a choice of whether to go short-term e10s support or long-term WebExt support, but sadly it's human to make mistakes and while I've been very critical of some Mozilla decisions, the company and the browser seem to be heading in the right direction. I'd rather have a modern browser that's able to deal with the demands of today without excessively taxing my hardware than be stuck in the past.
This is my problem: I believe everything people say on the internet
We have projects like webextensions experiments for cases where you want to do go beyond what the existing webextensions apis allow, we'll be communicating more about those as we get closer to the 57 release.
Fingers crossed. Toolbar API still hasn't got an assignee, WE Experiments seems to be Plan B for addons like Tab Mix Plus
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Checked with three of the extension developers I do Mac testing for. They said they are doing nothing until the WebExtensions API stops moving. Probably 2017-11-14
There is a distinct possibility that at Firefox 57 I might switch back to Firefox as my primary browser. The essential-to-me extensions are likely to be available, but it is possible that some extensions I highly value but not essential-to-me won't be available and won't have a Firefox-57-compatible alternative.
Mark12547 wrote:There is a distinct possibility that at Firefox 57 I might switch back to Firefox as my primary browser. The essential-to-me extensions are likely to be available,
No one knows what extensions will be available and of those how lame their capabilities will be.
Mark12547 wrote:but it is possible that some extensions I highly value but not essential-to-me won't be available and won't have a Firefox-57-compatible alternative.
In anticipation of FF57 have been playing around with Safari and Chrome.
Conclusions:
My mother would not use Safari, maybe my grandmother (RIP).
Chrome is interesting and has many extensions; however, most are lame (see below).
With FF and two extensions (Selective cookie delete & RefControl) I'm able to read news on certain sites that use a paywall that is not bullet proof. While I can find extensions for Chrome that purport to do the same things, in reality they don't. After two hours of playing with Chrome and various extensions those news sites can not be read without $$$ or £££ or €€€.
In anticipation of FF57 have been playing around with Safari and Chrome.
Conclusions:
My mother would not use Safari, maybe my grandmother (RIP).
Chrome is interesting and has many extensions; however, most are lame (see below).
With FF and two extensions (Selective cookie delete & RefControl) I'm able to read news on certain sites that use a paywall that is not bullet proof. While I can find extensions for Chrome that purport to do the same things, in reality they don't. After two hours of playing with Chrome and various extensions those news sites can not be read without $$$ or £££ or €€€.
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i had a look at Vivaldi yesterday, couldnt find a " Bookmark Manager " to import bookmarks.html . unless its in Settings?
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