Recommended Posts

Hmmm pinch.gif

By the way are you planning a Firefox theme to go with your Windows theme?

My Windows theme :blink: Maybe you mean Dom's theme? I think his theme has a lot of potential to work as a Firefox theme. Knowing us we will probably end up doing it after Minimal, TwentyTen, Metro, and all those others we have had on the back burner for a while.

There was something planned with the "Home Tab" but I think that's been scrapped.

Yeah, the Home Tab got scaled back a whole lot, currently it's just a google search box and news items from Mozilla.

Lots of stuff got scaled back/cut though, like browsing bookmark folders in content. But it can always come back in the future, since the foundation is there at least.

My Windows theme :blink: Maybe you mean Dom's theme? I think his theme has a lot of potential to work as a Firefox theme. Knowing us we will probably end up doing it after Minimal, TwentyTen, Metro, and all those others we have had on the back burner for a while.

lol yes, sorry I get you two confused some times! blush.gif

With a bunch of [softblocker] bugs which make FF4 slower than FF3.6

EDIT: What I am trying to say it that [hardblocker] bugs are not the only things you want them to fix.

Yeah, that first line made no sense. Blockers are blockers based on their specific issue ... they generally have little relevance to performance compared to 3.6 - they could be issues within new functionality, or new functionality itself.

The continued existence of a blocker doesn't mean the product is broken - just something wanted isn't there yet, which could be many things.

So what is the difference between this list of bugs:

https://bugzilla.moz...cking2.0:betan+

and this one:

https://bugzilla.moz...final%20sw:hard

first one is the list of bugs which were SUPPOSED to be fixed for the betas (soft + hard + others blockers)

while the second list has bugs which are MUST to be fixed for the betas (hard blockers)

Fonts look bad due to a Microsoft bug that is only evident when hardware acceleration is used. The best fix ATM, rather than turning hardware acceleration completely off in Options, is to just turn the text stuff off using about:config, adding an entry...... gfx.direct2d.disabled and set it to boolean TRUE and restart Firefox 4.

And now they're hiding one of the major new features of Firefox 4.0 from the user in the default config:

Actually, after talking with Limi, we've decided that the safest way forward will be to remove the Panorama button from the toolbar by default. Users can customize their toolbar to re-add it, or use the menu options to get in/out.

I'll file a bug to track that work, but for now let's take this off the list. I suspect Ian will agree, as he'd mentioned that this was one of the riskier changes left.

Source: Bugzilla@Mozilla

Read the discussion following the comment quoted above. Joe User sticks to the default settings most of the time - removing the toolbar icon makes it undiscoverable to most of the Firefox userbase. IMHO Mozilla might as well remove Panorama entirely from 4.0 and re-add it in 4.next.

Then again I consider Panorama an idea which looked good on paper, yet feels over-engineered and buggy when you actually use it.

Good grief... beta 9 is utter crap...

My window flickers like hell, it eats even more memory, it slows down fast... What the heck?

Glassed Silver:mac

Anyone know if they've fixed isolated cases of the browser freezing or stuttering on a cold start of the browser? I can easily see this happen by starting the browser, navigating to Neowin, and then scrolling up and down.

This is on beta 9 with a system that usually runs off a Intel HD Graphics chip.

I've had all these problems with beta 9, beta 8 was much better in those regards :(

Same here... beta 8 was rock solid compared to this POS...

To go even further, I much prefered any beta I tried before: 4, 6 and 8 have been awesome...

Glassed Silver:mac

Joe User sticks to the default settings most of the time - removing the toolbar icon makes it undiscoverable to most of the Firefox userbase. IMHO Mozilla might as well remove Panorama entirely from 4.0 and re-add it in 4.next.

Then again I consider Panorama an idea which looked good on paper, yet feels over-engineered and buggy when you actually use it.

Leaving it in allows them to get more feedback on it than leaving it out. Removing it is also likely a much bigger challenge.

Good grief... beta 9 is utter crap...

My window flickers like hell, it eats even more memory, it slows down fast... What the heck?

Glassed Silver:mac

Apparently *some* of beta 9's issues are fixed in a later trunk build (as problems I had with b9 I don't have with the current Minefield, which is b10pre) - some fixes failed to beat the clock?

Apparently *some* of beta 9's issues are fixed in a later trunk build (as problems I had with b9 I don't have with the current Minefield, which is b10pre) - some fixes failed to beat the clock?

I dislike Minefield's name and icon, hence I don't install it, but most likely yes I suppose...

Oh well... At this rate I will have b10 by next week or so :p

Glassed Silver:mac

Leaving it in allows them to get more feedback on it than leaving it out. Removing it is also likely a much bigger challenge.

I like TabCandy Panorama, but I think it was added a bit too late into the process, since it's been nothing but bug fixes and regressions.

I'll keep using it though, since I often have 30+ tabs open for distinct reasons.

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

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Everything they say you can already do yourself on the registry by changing some things.
    • Artist's renderings are so much nicer to view than the real thing, don't you think?
    • WildBit Viewer 6.20 released; no further updates planned by Razvan Serea WildBit Viewer is a popular, fast, and extensive image viewer offering a comprehensive suite of tools for photographers, designers, and image enthusiasts. It includes a powerful Viewer, Slide Show, Editor, Search, Profile Switcher, and Multi-Screen Viewer. The Viewer provides blazing-fast folder, file list, and thumbnail navigation with customizable headers, full-screen view, and a shell toolbar to organize favorite folders. It supports all major graphic formats (over 70), including JPEG, TIFF, PNG, BMP, GIF, PCX, TGA, and RAW formats. Detailed Image Info shows EXIF, IPTC, and XMP metadata, with rotation based on EXIF orientation, wallpaper setting, image comparison, geo-tag viewing, color labels, and CMS-aware color management. The Slide Show module offers 176 transition effects, multi-monitor support, custom shows with per-image settings, image marking, zoom, rotate, and desktop hiding for a professional viewing experience. The Editor supports advanced image manipulation, including crop, resize, color adjustments, curves, edge detection, effects, batch processing, retouching, layer support, and printing. Users can apply mass renaming, update or clear metadata, and work with multi-page TIFFs and animated GIFs. Search allows filtering by name, location, date, size, attributes, and metadata, while the Profile Switcher saves and loads custom layouts for all modules. The Multi-Screen Viewer opens multiple windows on available monitors, allowing simultaneous image viewing with independent zoom, pan, and rotation. WildBit Viewer also supports portable operation, 32- and 64-bit versions, Unicode, high-DPI displays, and multiple Windows styling options. With its combination of speed, versatility, and rich feature set, WildBit Viewer is an indispensable tool for managing, editing, and showcasing images efficiently. WildBit Viewer key features: Blazing-fast folder, file list, and thumbnail browsing Supports 70+ image formats including JPEG, TIFF, PNG, BMP, GIF, and RAW Full-screen view with multi-monitor support Explorer-style file handling with customizable headers Thumbnail Browser with sorting, view change, and fast size adjustment EXIF, IPTC, and XMP metadata viewing and editing Automatic rotation based on EXIF orientation Shell toolbar for organizing favorite folders Image Compare to calculate similarity between images Mass renaming and batch metadata updates File List Generator (HTML, CSV, RTF, TXT, Unicode) Rating and color labels, CMS-aware color management Video playback (AVI, MPG, MPEG, WMV) Animated GIF, multipage TIFF, Camera RAW support Slide Show with 176 transition effects and custom settings Editor: crop, resize, rotate, flip, canvas resize, and retouching tools Batch processing and image format conversion Multi-Screen Viewer: multiple windows with independent zoom, pan, and rotate Profile Switcher: save, load, reset, delete module profiles Portable operation, 32-/64-bit support, Unicode, and high-DPI ready WildBit Viewer 6.20 changelog: Viewer, Slide Show, Editor, Search, Profile Switcher & Multi Screen Viewer. Updated ImageEn to 15.0.0 version. Viewer, Slide Show, Editor, Search, Profile Switcher & Multi Screen Viewer. Updated Jedi JCL&JVCL. Viewer - Image Geo Info, OpenStreetMap removed. Slide Show Remote Mode removed. Note! This means that WildBit Slide Show Remote is now officially EOL. Editor - Shortcut keys for Capture removed. Optimized code. Note! This version includes help what supersedes all previous releases. plus Lots of bug fixes and changes, check Readme files for details. WildBit Viewer End‑of‑Life WildBit Viewer has reached its final release with version 6.20. As development comes to a close, no further feature updates are planned. WildBit Slide Show Remote reached End-of-Life on 06 June 2026, while WildBit Viewer will reach End-of-Life on 30 June 2026. Downloads will remain available until the end of July 2026 (possibly extending into early August). After End-of-Life, the software will no longer receive updates, security fixes, or technical support. Download: WildBit Viewer 64-bit | Portable 64-bit | ~70.0 MB (Freeware) Download: WildBit Viewer 32-bit | Portable 32-bit Links: WildBit Viewer Homepage | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Thanks for liking it! 😊 That's Arch Linux with Gnome.
    • LOL. Can't even quote and edit a comment correctly. Figures you're a Linux user.
  • Recent Achievements

    • Dedicated
      Conjor earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • Week One Done
      Windows Guy earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Dedicated
      Mark Spruce earned a badge
      Dedicated
    • Collaborator
      conkir earned a badge
      Collaborator
    • Rising Star
      olavinto went up a rank
      Rising Star
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      479
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      252
    3. 3
      Steven P.
      71
    4. 4
      FloatingFatMan
      69
    5. 5
      +Edouard
      69
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!