Recommended Posts

J?gerMonkey has "crossed the streams", which means that in it's base configuration it's now faster than Safari on SunSpider and the v8 benchmark.

There seems to be an issue that makes J?gerMonkey+TraceMonkey (i.e. the default setting) slower on SunSpider than plain J?gerMonkey, but that doesn't effect the v8 suite.

At this point Firefox 4 is 13ms slower than Chrome on SunSpider, which is less that 1/60th of a second to put that into perspective.

But I don't want the old status bar, it was crap and good riddance it's gone.

Those aren't coming back most likely. Going to have to use Fission or some type of addon to get em back.

Why on earth would they ever have wanted to remove them? They were working fine and finished, it doesn't make any sense to go back to the old style. Surely the jackass that decided that was a good idea has some sort of blog where he explains why they would want to regress and what drugs he was taking?

But I don't want the old status bar, it was crap and good riddance it's gone.

Why on earth would they ever have wanted to remove them? They were working fine and finished, it doesn't make any sense to go back to the old style. Surely the jackass that decided that was a good idea has some sort of blog where he explains why they would want to regress and what drugs he was taking?

AskVG.com is a well known news & web blog site. On his site he wrote a front page article entitled "What I hate about Firefox 4", he lists progress bars, removal of status bar, and removal of rss icon in address bar. He goes on to say that Mozilla should listen to what we supposedly want and revert back those changes. Now he just finished an article about how they listened to him and reverted progress bars, just like he wanted. I said it before, alot of ignorance in alpha & beta testers about their role, to test the software and report back to the developer, not use a major website to blog and try and influence developers with negative news articles and using headlines like "Hate about Firefox 4", which is not a finished product.!

http://www.askvg.com/things-i-hate-about-mozilla-firefox-4-0/

When the 64bit build becomes an officially supported release, the ability to run a 32bit plugin with a 64bit host will come with that.

you sure?!

i don't renumber it was part of their plan , maybe now that it won't be for Fx 4.0

they could do it?

Get the Add-On Status4Evah.

https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/235283/

It gives you back the old status-bar and also Progress-Line and some other options. It's just great.

My only gripe about Status4Evar is that it messes up the look of the URL identifier box... :cry:

Greaemonkey Development Builds

The 10.15 build WFM with Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 6.1; rv:2.0b8pre) Gecko/20101017 Firefox/4.0b8pre ID:20101017041222

I've downloaded that a few times, but each time I go to click "Install" on userscripts.org, all I get is a page of script, and nothing is installed. Is it just a problem on my end?

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • No, "a great deal" for 32GB of DDR5 is $50, not $350.
    • Linux 7.1 stable launch looms as Linus Torvalds releases the final release candidate by Paul Hill Linus Torvalds has just released what’s expected to be the final release candidate of Linux 7.1, rc7. The Linux founder said that this RC is not small, but smaller than recent releases, which is a good sign because he expects the stable version to drop next week if things continue on this trajectory. Linux kernels see a merge window for the first two weeks of their life, where developers add new features, then there are about seven or eight weeks of release candidates before the stable version. Typically, there are seven release candidates, but if more time is needed, then an eighth release candidate is released too. This week’s RC’s biggest area of fixes was for GPUs, with networking just behind. Torvalds said that the rest of the release was “pretty random and spread out” with some architecture fixes, driver fixes, filesystem improvements, and build fixes for more unusual configs. In terms of specific pieces of hardware receiving improvements in this update, we had more AMD Zen6 models supported and fixes for AMD SDMA 7.1 and GFX11. Hardware that got improvements includes Lenovo laptops, HONOR laptops, and MSI laptops. Here are the changelogs for those: ASoC: amd: acp: Add DMI quirk for Lenovo Yoga Pro 7 15ASH11 Input: atkbd - add DMI quirk for Lenovo Yoga Air 14 (83QK) Input: atkbd - skip deactivate for HONOR BCC-N's internal keyboard ASoC: amd: yc: Add MSI Raider A18 HX A9WJG to quirk table ASoC: amd: yc: Enable internal mic on MSI Bravo 17 C7VF When the stable Linux 7.1 is released, it will be up to distribution maintainers, such as Canonical and Red Hat, to release the update to their users via the update manager. Some versions of Linux will get it before others, and some will never get it at all. Fedora and Arch-based distros will be among the first to get it, though. If you don’t get it, the security fixes will be backported to your system’s kernel, so you won’t be at risk, but you won’t get newer hardware support, which is fine if your computer works now.
    • Ideally, the algorithm is smart enough to see the real sender ID and non-spoofed address to block it. Ideally.
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Month Later
      DJC50PLUS earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • Week One Done
      DJC50PLUS earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Proficient
      Eric Biran went up a rank
      Proficient
    • Dedicated
      Conjor earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • Week One Done
      Windows Guy earned a badge
      Week One Done
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      493
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      248
    3. 3
      Steven P.
      71
    4. 4
      ATLien_0
      68
    5. 5
      +Edouard
      68
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!