Tuesday, November 14th 2017
Mozilla Announces Firefox Quantum Web-browser
Mozilla today released the Firefox Quantum web-browser for PCs. Technically version 57.0 of Firefox, Quantum comes with an overhauled user-interface, a more evolved multi-process sandbox than Google Chrome, and is geared for both performance and lower memory footprint. Mozilla claims that web-rendering performance has been doubled over the previous version (Firefox 56.0), making it play in a league above Google Chrome. It's also designed to have up to 30% smaller memory footprint than Chrome.
Firefox Quantum takes advantage of the very latest CPU instruction sets, and GPU features, to accelerate web-rendering, with a focus on keeping the interface as smooth as possible, without losing out on the quality of rendering. It also adds WebVR and and WASM support in-built, broadening its feature-set for browser-based gaming. Grab Firefox from the link below.DOWNLOAD: Mozilla Firefox Quantum
Firefox Quantum takes advantage of the very latest CPU instruction sets, and GPU features, to accelerate web-rendering, with a focus on keeping the interface as smooth as possible, without losing out on the quality of rendering. It also adds WebVR and and WASM support in-built, broadening its feature-set for browser-based gaming. Grab Firefox from the link below.DOWNLOAD: Mozilla Firefox Quantum
87 Comments on Mozilla Announces Firefox Quantum Web-browser
IMO, so far, so good.
There is just one problem. I sacked Firefox few months ago because of the problems I had with it and started using Opera. And I fell in love with it. I don't think speed alone is enough to gain me back. Opera's integrated AdBlocker, integrated mouse gestures, out of the box last tab close button that doesn't close the whole browser, on the fly unit conversion, video popout and overall smoothness and effortless use is just something I'm not willing to trade. And the fact that on mobile devices, Opera browser is nearly impossible to match, I think I'm staying with Opera regardless. Firefox, while it can gain with addons, they just aren't on the level of quality Opera's integrated features have. And syncing all that to my mobile phone on rather clumsy mobile version of Firefox, I don't know. I never thought Opera would come to this point after they sacked their old ways after Opera 12, but those bloody Scandinavians did it. Opera 49 is a fierce competition on the browser market and it's just better than everyone else at the moment.
Still, give it a try, Firefox is way better than god awful Chrome. Or super fast but rather limited functionality wise Edge.
first column is new firefox and second is latest chrome. Chrome is significantly slower in every test except with regular expressions, dna and unpack code. String management is on par.
I want to see this javascript engine in node.js ... shouldn't take long ... any time now
The FF Quantum update definitely feels snappy.
A good test opening up hotmail/gmail/youtube.
Bravo Mozilla.
Performance was never an issue for me, but yes, this does feel snappier. Now if only extensions will migrate...
Then again, I only use a handful of plugins on a daily basis, ymmv.
And about cookies, the only management I use is to not accept 3rd party cookies and set cookies to expire after 10 days (prevents piling up).
The UI for setting cookies to expire is long gone, but you can still set network.cookie.lifetimePolicy=3 and network.cookie.lifetime.days=<whatever_you're_comfortable_with> <- no plugins required, the only side effect that I'm aware of is that I need to log in again after 10 days. But even that is a plus in my book.
I feel naked without a script blocker :twitch:.
I'm using No-Script Suite Lite for the time being but I much preferred Noscript.
Oh and I just thought of a downside: this new Firefox absolutely murders CPU when streaming videos (not with youtube, I haven't pinpointed the cause yet).