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The render-mode preference is outdated, Direct2D is controlled by it's own pref now.

And the DirectWrite pref is only there so you can mix it with old GDI rendering, mainly for performance testing I would think (Since it'd be slower than plain GDI or plain Direct2D)

So in conclusion I should use value 0 for pure Direct2D ? You got me confused... :)

I made some customizations to Firefox 4 b5 aiming for a clean and minimalist look. Tested on Windows 7 with custom theme.

16117kp.jpg

/* Font Tweaks*/
menubar, menubutton, menulist, menu, menuitem, textbox, toolbar, tab, .tab-text, tree, tooltip {
    font-size: 8pt !important;
    font-family: Calibri !important;
}

/* Remove the URL bar Go button*/
#go-button {
    display: none !important;
}

/* hide the Search Engine image*/
.searchbar-engine-image {
    display: none !important;
}

/* remove the search button (magnifying glass)*/
.search-go-button {
    display: none !important;
}

/* Kill bookmark icons in the Personal Toolbar*/
toolbarbutton.bookmark-item > .toolbarbutton-icon {
    display: none !important;
}

/*Hide Firefox Sync Statusbar Icon*/
#sync-status-button {
    display: none !important;
}

/*Disable tabstoolbar drag - enable newtab double clicking*/
#TabsToolbar {
    -moz-binding: none !important;
}

/*Transparent Firefox Button - no text*/
#appmenu-button {
    padding: 5px 28px 3px 0px !important;
    margin-top:3px !important;
    background-color: transparent !important;
}
#appmenu-button .button-text {
    display: none !important;
}

/*Reduce titlebar margin - choose margin according your windows theme (minimize, maximize close buttons)*/
#main-window {
    margin-top: -7px !important;
}
#main-window[sizemode="maximized"] {
    margin-top: -4px !important;
}

/*Remove some dropmarkers*/
#back-forward-dropmarker {
    display: none !important;
}
#urlbar > .autocomplete-history-dropmarker {
    display: none !important;
}
/*Transparency, hover and more naked UI*/
#PersonalToolbar, #nav-bar {
    background-color: transparent !important;
    border: none !important;
}
#nav-bar {
    margin-top: 1px !important;
}
#urlbar, #searchbar > *, #search-box {
    -moz-appearance: none !important;
    background: transparent !important;
    color: #000000 !important;
    border: none !important;
    -moz-box-shadow: none !important;
    height: 22px !important; /*Fix searchbar height without magnifying glass and search engine icon*/
}
#urlbar:hover, #searchbar:hover > *, .findbar-textbox:hover {
    background: rgba(255,255,255,.5) !important;
}
#browser-bottombox, #status-bar, #status-bar > *, #ybToolbar {
    background: rgba(255,255,255,.07) !important;
    -moz-appearance: none !important;
    border: #000000 !important;
}
.tabbrowser-tab:not([selected="true"]) {
    background: rgba(0,0,0,0.2) !important;
    color: #eeeeee !important;
    text-shadow: none !important;
}
.tabbrowser-tab[selected="true"] {
    background-image: -moz-linear-gradient(left, transparent, transparent 1px, rgba(255,255,255,.5) 1px, rgba(255,255,255,.5)) !important;
}
.tabs-newtab-button {
    background: transparent !important;
    border: #000000 !important;
}
.tabs-newtab-button:hover, #new-tab-button:hover, .scrollbutton-down:hover, .scrollbutton-up:hover, #alltabs-button:hover, #tabview-button:hover {
    -moz-appearance: none !important;
    background: none !important;
    border: #000000 !important;
}
.toolbarbutton-1 > .toolbarbutton-menubutton-button, .toolbarbutton-1 > .toolbarbutton-menubutton-dropmarker, .toolbarbutton-1 {
    background: transparent !important;
    border: none !important;
    -moz-box-shadow: none !important;
}

Just leave it on the default setting (which is -1, just right click on it and select reset)

Ok, thanks for clearing.

By the way noticed that i forgot to edit the "max version" in the fission add-on so you don't need to disable compatibility reporter so here it is: BETA 5 -> LINK ; BETA 6 - > LINK!!

The beta is incredibly sluggish for me, even with every addon disabled.. switching a tab takes like a second. Is this a known problem?

The ones I know are,

- Rendering Glitches w. Flash and D2D/D3D

- Severe Performance issues w. Flash and D2D in some cases

- Animated GIFs rape the CPU as of a week or so ago

- Scrolling was much smother ~10 days ago

- DownloadThemAll! uses more CPU w. D2D enabled

All these are known btw.

The version bump to 4.0b7pre took place today.

For what it's worth, I had to manually download today's nightly - the automatic update was stuck on 'Checking for updates...' (using yesterday's 4.0b6pre OS X build if it matters).

You can download today's nightly manually from here.

Firefox 4 beta 6 build 1 now available:

ftp://ftp.mozilla.org/pub/mozilla.org/firefox/nightly/4.0b6-candidates/build1/win32/en-US/Firefox%20Setup%204.0%20Beta%206.exe

Looks like build 2 is probably coming out very soon too.

Strange. Combined stop-go-reload button not present in this release ...

Well, obviously the development up to the anticipated 4.0 is going to be relatively slow and I don't think it's even slated to be released until next year. This way people who don't even know about minefield builds can still see the progress being made in regular intervals.

I was just wondering, why is Mozilla releasing so many betas of this? Other browsers would have already done been released.

Mozilla's development schedule is set out so that features land over a series of betas, with one being the "feature complete" milestone (For 4.0, it was Beta 5, but they moved it to Beta 6 to allow for some more development time on some things, but now that they're releasing a beta fix for a crash they're fiddled with the names), then small fixes make it in up until the RC stage.

Other groups may lay their schedule out so that features land in alpha, and beta is solely for testing. In other cases the beta's may actually just be more like release candidates, so you might get a couple then a release.

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