Mozilla Firefox 3.5 review

By Benny Har-Even,
Rating: 
Price as reviewed:£0 Free
Forget Microsoft and the dull facts of its still dominant market share - Mozilla is really the biggest name in browsers.
OK, so Internet Explorer may still be top, but Firefox was the first to really make a dent in Microsoft’s market share and with version 3.5 it’s still pushing the boat out.
Since Firefox 3.0 was launched, Mozilla has fresh competition snapping at its heels from the likes of Google’s Chrome, Apple’s Safari 4 and let’s not forget Opera, with its recent 10 beta. All have touted speed improvements for general rendering and JavaScript.
The latter has been increasingly important for use in major websites such as Facebook and Google Docs, which rely on dynamic elements, and it’s only going to become more important in the future.
Mozilla originally announced that a 3.1 update would be coming not long after version 3.0 was released, but it’s been much delayed, as feature creep began to set in. However it’s now here. So was it worth the wait?
Appearance wise there not much visual difference between them, and Mozilla has resisted the temptation to add a flashy front end to the program, such as the Top Sites feature you get in Safari 4 – you just get a simple ‘Welcome to Firefox 3.5’ welcome page, instead. Rather, the company has focused on more fundamental features. Having said that, there is a new Firefox icon – which appears to just add a shadow to the old one.
Be wary though that, inevitably, not all of Firefox’s plug-ins will work immediately with 3.5, which may knock upgrading on the head until developers catch up. A good example is Google Gears, the software that’s needed to store off-line data for Gmail and Google Docs, but Google has stated that it’s on the case.
New features
The immediate difference we noted was that a fresh tab is now displayed by default even with just one open – a visual indicator of the presence of tabs, something it’s clearly taken from IE. You can also now restore previously closed Windows as well as previous tabs, which could prove very useful.
Related articles
advertisement
Latest Internet News
Google unveils Google Buzz
Web giant Google has taken the wraps of its latest innovation, a social networking tool dubbed Google Buzz.
Latest Internet Features
The problems facing Internet Explorer
It’s been a tricky start to the year for Microsoft’s Internet Explorer web browser. But are there any signs of better times round the corner, wonders Simon Brew?
advertisement
Most popular
- Microsoft mistakenly reveals free Office 2010 upgrade offer
- Google working on translator phone
- UK firm X2 unveils its own iTablet
- IBM unveils Power7 chips
- A buyer's guide to the top 10 netbooks
- Dell must defend against faulty notebook claims
- The problems facing Internet Explorer
- Top 10 areas where open source leads the way
- China closes biggest hacker training site
- Head to Head: Google Nexus One vs Apple iPhone 3GS
Whitepapers
Want more background on today's hottest IT trends?
Visit IT PRO's whitepaper library for more on virtualisation, encryption and other topics.
Register for IT PRO
You'll get exclusive member benefits including free whitepapers, downloads, Webinars and weekly newsletters full of the latest IT PRO news, reviews, insight and expertise.







video in HTML5
great write up - thanks. another cool preview of html5 video has been created by YouTube - http://www.youtube.com/html5 The question is what formats the main browsers will support and when IE will get round to supporting it as until it does I can't see many people wanting to encode their videos in multiple formats when Flash video already works.
By moonty on Friday Jul 3