![]() ![]() The other thing users care about? A more secure browser (perceived) which Chrome brings (in part) with signed WebExtensions which Firefox is now trying to do. Marketing is a factor also of course for Chrome. Chrome won (is winning now) because of better performance and stability as they were able to implement multi-process first. LOL Relatively few people actually care about XUL-based extensions or the classic UX (or the forcing out of Brendan Eich). Firefox's user base already purged a while ago and mostly went to Chrome which already uses WebExtensions. I really don't understand comments like this. It's not looking like a good future for Firefox users, that's for sure. Honestly, there's a chance Firefox's userbase will greatly plunge due to these changes. that said, XUL-based extensions like Classic Theme Restorer likely won't be coming back. or just go with the changes.īut there's still ample time for developers to port their extensions, if possible (which depends on the APIs), to WebExtensions. Looks like Classic Theme Restorer was integrated into Cyberfox so yeah, that'll definitely give them issues by the end of 2017 unless they fully fork off like Pale Moon.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |