Mozilla announced the release of Firefox 48 for desktop yesterday, introducing a long-awaited multi-process feature to the browser along with a handful of interface tweaks. Firefox 48 is the first ...
Mozilla has released a new version of Firefox that it hopes will make the browser a faster and more responsive competitor to Google's Chrome. In August, Firefox will ship its first feature across all ...
In a bid to make itself more responsive as compared to other browsers like Google’s Chrome, Mozilla Firefox has rolled out a new version of Firefox for desktop. Firefox 48, a new multi-process Firefox ...
Today (June 7), Mozilla released Firefox 47, with improved handling for streaming, HTML5 video and the VP9 codec. But the more interesting news is that Firefox 48 has now reached the beta release ...
Mozilla has officially brought multi-process support to the Firefox web browser. After debuting multi-process support in Firefox 48 beta a few months ago, the developers have dropped the beta label.
Firefox 48 shipped today with two long-awaited new features designed to improve the stability and security of the browser. After seven years of development, version 48 is at last enabling a ...
The latest version of Firefox just hit the proverbial streets, and it should make the browser more responsive and less prone to freezing for tab addicts. Firefox 48 includes a new under-the-hood ...
On August 2, 2016, Mozilla deployed the latest version of Firefox, version 48. As is usual, updates take a few days to roll out to all Linux distributions as maintainers may need to do testing or ...
What’s brand new and already a little rusty? The latest version of the Firefox browser for the desktop will have a component based on the new Mozilla-backed Rust language, said Dave Herman, a ...
Earlier today, the public release of Firefox 48 landed for both desktop and Android. Although there hasn’t been much fanfare, it represents a significant leap forward for the browser that is ...
After extensive planning and development, multi-process Firefox (aka Electrolysis or e10s) is here with Firefox 48. The jist of it is this: web content and browser interface processes are now separate ...