Officially launching on Mozilla today, the development team behind Firefox has rolled out a variety of speed improvements and several different tweaks to the layout. Upon installing the new version, Firefox users will immediately notice the new light gray Start Page which contains a familiar Google search field in addition to a variety of new shortcut icons at the bottom of the screen. The one-click shortcuts include direct access to downloads, bookmarks, history, add-ons, syncing across devices and the main pop-up window for settings. There’s also a “Restore Previous Session” icon that opens up all the previous tabs that were being used the last time Firefox was opened.
Similar to Google Chrome, Mozilla plans to use the Start Page as a gateway to enter the Apps Market in order to help users find new extensions to install. The Start Page can be pinned as an App Tab in order to allow users quick access to the shortcuts. Also similar to Google Chrome, Mozilla has added support for nine thumbnails that display recently viewed sites when opening up a new tab.
Firefox users have the option of pinning specific thumbnails so those sites will always appear on the page or specifically deleting sites in order to remove a site from the page. Sites can also be dragged around the interface. If a Firefox user prefers the old design, there’s an option in the top right corner of the New Tab page that will revert to the solid white background.
In order to tweak loading times, Mozilla has modified the tab loading function that was added within Firefox 12. Rather than loading all tabs when the user starts Firefox, the new “Tabs on Demand” feature will specifically load the active tab only and defer loading of all other tabs until the user actually clicks on a tab. This feature will be particularly helpful if a user utilizes a large number of tabs and attempts to load a previous session. This process will ultimately help free up resources and avoid shifting into a slow crawl when loading pages.
Mozilla has also included a new “Reset” button in Firefox 13 that will restore the browser to basic settings, but also saves all data related to your Firefox profile. Data saved after clicking the reset button includes passwords, bookmarks, browsing history, cookies and auto-fill information. During the reset process, items returned to default settings or simply not saved include themes, extensions, open tabs and site-specific preferences. Ideally, this feature will be helpful for anyone that installs a problematic, third-party extension or someone that simply wants a fresh installation of Firefox.
According to PC World, other improvements within Firefox 13 include tweaked software that cycles memory and free up resources when a tab is closed as well as speed improvements within previously “unoptimized routines” in Firefox code. Anyone interested in downloading the new version of Firefox can find the updated software on the Mozilla site when it launches today or simply wait until the browser updates the software automatically over the next week.
not bad… somehow youtube loads faster in ff…
Chrome….is best.
Anything Google is questionable
the only reason i use FF is because vimeo actually runs smoothly on it, unlike on chrome. then again, that’s probably just me.
chrome used to be the best don’t know why its been crawling recently and taking up so much memory
Chrome….is best.
How do I get that “pinning” stopped in FF 13? For me it is an intrusive annoyance.
Chrome is better, but I still use firefox for Gaia online :3 Mostly because of the toolbars that only work for ff.
Well, at least you acknowledge Chrome is better by having to even ask the question.
Who else is so confident about their software that they have a standing reward of $60K (freakin’ grand) to any and all who can find a bug in it??!
http://blog.chromium.org/2012/02/pwnium-rewards-for-exploits.html
Real geeks understand that FF is the new IE, lol. I’m done hearing about FF v.X playing catch-up. I’ve used them all, literally since the “web browser” GUI evolved from Prodigy, text-only BBS’s, etc. – and Chrome is on top, in a league of it’s own; undisputed OVERALL smartest choice – not necessarily for Grandma – but for heavy Cloud users … and always will be, because it was built on/with/for Cloud integration.
I’m so comfortable with what they’re doing, and where they’re going I run Canary *along-side* stable Chrome. And they’re pushing out Canary improvements DAILY.
ff is kidding with this new updating scheme …… there hardly seems 2 be ny noticeable n substantial difference from previous version!!
They update Firefox every 2 months. Whoop.
I prefer Firefox always.
Never. FF, MS, Opera, etc will never have the ecosystem that Google does. Ideal browser is not only speed (millisecond differences) & security, but also one-click integration with G.Maps, G.Mail, AdSense, G.Reader, Search, Picasa, G+, and of course Docs/Drive.
Dam I stopped using FF like 2 years ago…just kept crashing on my Windows 7…Hate changing browsers because I like Chrome so much now…
..love the smooth page scroll =)
Much better