Mozilla's biggest browser remake since 2011, with a new interface and easier
customization, begins to push away from the gate as Firefox 29 moves to
beta.
Barring unforeseen events, big changes for Mozilla Firefox will be airborne
in about six weeks.
Thursday's update moves Firefox 29 to beta, the final testing grounds where
Mozilla can make stability and feature changes to the overhaul before it pushes
it out to the public at large.
The new version of Firefox comes with a new interface, an easier way to
customize Firefox, and an upgraded Firefox Sync that requires all current users
to create new accounts and resynchronize their browsers, in exchange forgetting
simple user accounts with their end-to-end encryption. The new interface gives
the browser a more touch-friendly look, as well as unifying design elements
across Firefox's mobile and desktop versions. Windows and Linux users can say
goodbye to the orange Firefox button.
However, not much appears to have changed between Firefox 29 on Mozilla's
Aurora build for developers and the new beta build for enthusiasts, indicating
that what you see now is pretty much gaoing to be what you get in a month and a
half.
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