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Firefox used to ask me if I wanted to save the current tabs to reopen them when initializing the browser, or just quit when multiple tabs were open before quitting a session. From some recent nightly builds, this option has gone and I can't seem to find where to enable that again. Was this feature removed from FF4?

"Warn me when closing multiple tabs" and startup behavior of opening the last session are not exactly what I'm looking for :/

EDIT: I found it on browser.showQuitWarning - changed it to TRUE.

Funny, cause that should be set to true by default, but now it has turned to bold, meaning it was set by me?

Anyone else notice that when you go to the bookmarks menu, then right click on a bookmark and say go to delete or properties, it like flickers? I'm guessing this is a bug. I think I noticed it in Beta 10 also, but not in Beta 9. I don't mean the bookmarks toolbar. That is smooth as can be and the way it should be. I mean when you go to the Bookmarks Menu next to History. It seems even the history menu flickers when you right click on stuff. I'm disabling add-ons to see if it's add-on related. So far no luck. Anyone know what I'm talking about?

when you open a bookmark bar link in a new tab, does it sometimes load the homepage for anybody else??

also, more specifically, if you have new tab url (or new tab homepage) installed, is there any way for the cursor to default to the page and not the address bar?? i.e. when i click the new tab button, it loads my homepage google.co.uk, but the cursor goes to the address bar instead of google.co.uk's search box...

i know people will probably say use the search bar etc, but this is just something i'm used to doing, since ever (which you know is a long time since i took the "for" of that mutha******)....

when you open a bookmark bar link in a new tab, does it sometimes load the homepage for anybody else??

also, more specifically, if you have new tab url (or new tab homepage) installed, is there any way for the cursor to default to the page and not the address bar?? i.e. when i click the new tab button, it loads my homepage google.co.uk, but the cursor goes to the address bar instead of google.co.uk's search box...

i know people will probably say use the search bar etc, but this is just something i'm used to doing, since ever (which you know is a long time since i took the "for" of that mutha******)....

I can only answer the first part, and that is a definite no. What about my problem? Read my post and respond please. Thanks!

Recently i noticed that when i have more than 7 tabs the X button on them goes away and comes back when there are 7 and less tabs.Can i make it show the X button on tabs always?

Does adjusting this in about:config help?

browser.tabs.tabClipWidth

http://kb.mozillazine.org/Browser.tabs.tabClipWidth

...

EDIT: I found it on browser.showQuitWarning - changed it to TRUE.

... it has turned to bold, meaning it was set by me?

Yes. If you click on "Status" in about:config, you will be able to sort the settings: user set or default. The user set ones are in bold but I don't remember setting quite a few of them even though I'm the sole user of my PC !

That Netbook excuse might be right for some, but not mine...

It's an Asus 1201N ION Dual Core with 4GB of RAM, running W7 HP, it's no Ferrari computer, but it beats many, let me say again many Notebooks on the market... I can already see all the bad reviews it's going to get...

Explain me why IE9 Beta/RC Chrome 10 run perfectly fine with HA on and Firefox ever since 4.0 Beta 5 like crap..

Even the animation of opening and closing a Tab feels sluggish, you actually see the animation a few frames forward or backwards.

Sorry I'm a major Firefox fan ever since v0.9, but 4.0 is just a nightmare on performance... :(

It makes no sense, I can see 720P and even 1080P at 30% CPU use with 0 frames drop.

It's such a nightmare that I'm actually thinking on moving to another browser, something I never thought before in the last 6 years.

PS:Turning On or Off HA in 4.0 makes little difference.

I bet that CPU is weaker than Athlon II P340 and that stutters as well. :)

Video is a purely GPU. Not worth mentioning, FF4 doesn't support GPU video and scrolling has nothing to do with it anyway.

I've neen b**ch**g on bugzilla for quite some time now about this.

Netbook with Windows 7? If not, go sit in the corner.

1. Issue is most prominent on low-end hardware. Netbook has Atom N270 CPU.

2. Issue is masked by Direct2D. I didn't use D2D in video. Netbook still stutters with D2D, but less visible.

3. Issue might also be Windows only.

I have an Asrock Ion with an Atom N270 CPU & Nvidia Ion GPU. Ff is freakin aweful! Slow, unresponsive, forcing me to use IE9 or Chrome. Last nite I finished putting together a PC with a quad core and you would not believe how FAST Ff is! I kept thinking that someone was smoking to much of something cause my experience up till now was the exact opposite of theirs. There is a definite need for some type of optimized build for low end cpu's. There is no reason for the competition to have a better browser given the market for mobile computing. Low end cpu equals longer battery life and represents alot of current users.

So maybe I'm behind the power curve, but apparently, at least in Linux, if you're running a 64 bit OS which installs 64 bit browser plugins by default, the version you download from their site via the little link is only 32 bit and will not work with your plugins. You have to go to the nightly builds page to find the latest 64 bit build before it will pick your Java, Flash, and other plugins.

You all got me interested on trying Firefox 4 Beta and nightly on my very old pc. I highly doubt it will do very well but I expect that. That is what Opera is for! I still will try using Firefox 4 on it just not heavily. Mozilla does really need to make sure their browser works well on low end pcs too. Opera has got this down now Mozilla just has to do it. I wonder how Internet Explorer is in this regard especially IE9.

You all got me interested on trying Firefox 4 Beta and nightly on my very old pc. I highly doubt it will do very well but I expect that. That is what Opera is for! I still will try using Firefox 4 on it just not heavily. Mozilla does really need to make sure their browser works well on low end pcs too. Opera has got this down now Mozilla just has to do it. I wonder how Internet Explorer is in this regard especially IE9.

IIRC, IE9 doesn't run on anything older than Windows Vista.

You all got me interested on trying Firefox 4 Beta and nightly on my very old pc. I highly doubt it will do very well but I expect that.

I have the nightly running on an old UMPC that's only got 512MB and a 900MHz Celeron; it's actually pretty good, all things considered. (It's going to be painful regardless of what I run on that setup) My biggest gripe with FF4 is the memory usage though; it's still pretty fat compared to v3. V4 can quickly blow up to 3 or 4 times the memory usage of V3, although I'm guessing it's just using what's available for caching, the "unused memory is wasted memory" principle. Little leery about it yet though, especially when running on the aforementioned antique that hits the swap if you just look at it funny. That thing really has no business running 7 and FF4, more suited for Win95 and Netscape, but hey, why not.

I have the nightly running on an old UMPC that's only got 512MB and a 900MHz Celeron; it's actually pretty good, all things considered. (It's going to be painful regardless of what I run on that setup) My biggest gripe with FF4 is the memory usage though; it's still pretty fat compared to v3. V4 can quickly blow up to 3 or 4 times the memory usage of V3, although I'm guessing it's just using what's available for caching, the "unused memory is wasted memory" principle. Little leery about it yet though, especially when running on the aforementioned antique that hits the swap if you just look at it funny. That thing really has no business running 7 and FF4, more suited for Win95 and Netscape, but hey, why not.

Yeah I tried Windows 7 on my old Intel P4 1.5 Ghz, 512 MB of ram, 40 GB HD, video card barely powerful enough for flash but no gaming can't even run CSS lol and I went back to Windows XP. The biggest problem on the old system is the ram and the HD. Not upgrading SDRAM though.

That is why I use BarTab though with Firefox and always have 40 + tabs open. I could have 200+ tabs if I really wanted. If you don't like BarTab the alternatives are TooManyTabs and TabGroups Manager but I don't like them entirely anymore, at least with Firefox 4, because it now has Tab Groups integrated into it. Now if they actually worked with it then that would be awesome and much more reason to use them. Have used TooManyTabs primarily because it let me move the toolbar where ever I wanted. Though I had to install a add on that let me unlock toolbars.

I use Tab Groups in Firefox 4 but not the way you may think. Only mainly use it as a button with the add-on TabGroups Menu. That way I never have to go into another window just to organize my tabs. Don't worry you don't have to use a menu but you can. I prefer a button.

tabgroupsmenu.png

Seems they changed the behavior of the Find bar. It used to always stay but now as soon as you either change tab or move to another page it closes itself.

Anyway to revert back to the old behavior? Sometimes I use the find bar with the same search text on multiple pages, like on forums without a search thread feature and having to press ctrl+f everytime I change page is getting annoying.

I bet that CPU is weaker than Athlon II P340 and that stutters as well. :)

Video is a purely GPU. Not worth mentioning, FF4 doesn't support GPU video and scrolling has nothing to do with it anyway.

I've neen b**ch**g on bugzilla for quite some time now about this.

The CPU excuse is just the lack of proper optimizations in the code, FX4 is being rushed, everyone knows that... :cool:

FX4 isn't even using 50% of the CPU, because of the lack of multi-core support in FX 4.0... :(

Video and Animations like ad's with Flash interacts with the Web page viewing so it does use the GPU.

The CPU excuse is just the lack of proper optimizations in the code, FX4 is being rushed, everyone knows that... :cool:

FX4 isn't even using 50% of the CPU, because of the lack of multi-core support in FX 4.0... :(

Video and Animations like ad's with Flash interacts with the Web page viewing so it does use the GPU.

What is mult-core support in a browser exactly and which ones have it ? What is the benefit ?

I am not aware of any multi-row bookmark things, I just use folder drop downs.

The CPU excuse is just the lack of proper optimizations in the code, FX4 is being rushed, everyone knows that... :cool:

FX4 isn't even using 50% of the CPU, because of the lack of multi-core support in FX 4.0... :(

Video and Animations like ad's with Flash interacts with the Web page viewing so it does use the GPU.

I am complaining here to let off steam.

You need to file a bug, comment in an existing bug (like the one I linked to), etc. if you want them to care.

I was just saying that FF doesn't support DXVA functionality and thus your comment on being able to watch HD movies is meaningless.

FF4 does utilize GPU to speed up scrolling and rendering.

Hmm...scrolling hasn't been so great for me, either, but that wasn't until the past few days. Before that it was butter smooth.

I'm at a friend's house now and she has a build from Feb 10th installed and it is noticeably smoother than mine (used to be the other way around), so I wonder what changed between then and now?

I am not aware of any multi-row bookmark things, I just use folder drop downs.

I am complaining here to let off steam.

You need to file a bug, comment in an existing bug (like the one I linked to), etc. if you want them to care.

I was just saying that FF doesn't support DXVA functionality and thus your comment on being able to watch HD movies is meaningless.

FF4 does utilize GPU to speed up scrolling and rendering.

There is another way to speed up firefox scrolling and rendering even more yourself but it is manually and a pain. It works though. It basically like seeing the future of Firefox 4.1 or 5 when each tab is a separate process like IE. Once this happens it will help Firefox a a ton! Just wish it was easier to do manually so it wasn't such a pain in the butt to do now. I don't mind waiting though sense I have a way around it if I really need to make it faster before it is put into firefox.

I decided to try the 64 bit version with the flash 64 bit square. For some reason it was a lot faster for me, that's all really the opposite for me happens for IE9 where the 64bit it slower. The biggest speed boost was the startup, tabs also go more fluid and pages seem to load a tad faster.

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    • 7 Days: "Enough is enough," Computex 2026, and the next trillion-dollar company by Aditya Tiwari 7 Days is a weekly roundup of picks of what's been happening in the world of technology - written with a dash of humor, a hint of exasperation, and an endless supply of (black) coffee. This week's highlights are packed with hardware announcements from Computex 2026, Microsoft's BUILD developer conference, and lawsuits against OpenAI and Ring. Let's get started. You can check out the recent issues of the 7 Days weekly roundup. "Enough is enough" From "bribing" users to forcing Edge at startup, Microsoft has turned over every stone to make people use its web browser. Browser Choice Alliance (which includes Chrome, Opera, and Vivaldi) is now after the Redmond giant once more and has penned an open letter to highlight dissatisfaction with its practices. The letter to CEO Satya Nadella emphasizes that "enough is enough" and Microsoft should respect browser choices on Windows. BCA laid down a list of actions to level the playing field and believes that browsers should compete on merit. In other browser news, a fresh update to Firefox fixed a massive VPN button and a bug that disrupted page layout. The Ladybird Browser Project announced that it will no longer accept public pull requests and limit changes to those made by its maintainers as it moves towards its first alpha release. Computex 2026 In one of the week's hottest stories, AMD is trying to make DDR5 RAM even faster on Ryzen systems with its new EXPO ULL (Ultra Low Latency). The feature will enable support for even lower CAS Latency DDR5, bringing significant performance gains over normal EXPO. AMD released new octa-core 3D V-cache CPUs in the form of the new Ryzen 7 5800X3D and Ryzen 7 7700X3D for AM4 and AM5, respectively. The company also brought the 9070 GRE to the USA and other countries. Compared to the NVIDIA RTX 5060 Ti, AMD claims the 9070 GRE offers 22% faster performance and 26% better value. The expo also set the stage for Intel's Crescent Island GPU for data center AI workloads and inference. It can pack up to 480GB LPDDR5X VRAM, and the cooling department is handled by an air cooler with a 350W TDP. The silicon giant's AI-focused data center strategy also includes Clearwater Forest, which comprises new Xeon 6+ up to 288 E-cores. Intel unveiled its OpenVINO Physical AI framework to enable scalable, lower-cost edge robotics with improved efficiency. The company said it has found a way to fill the "missing link" that made it difficult to deploy physical AI at scale across the edge. The next trillion-dollar company? Image via DepositPhotos.com Hitting the trillion-dollar mark is the new fashion in the tech industry. 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That said, here are some more stories from the gaming world: Crystal Dynamics pushes Tomb Raider remake to 2027 A roguelike and a 4X strategy game are free to claim on the Epic Games Store Looks like EA's Star Wars Zero Company will be out this August God of War Laufey announced, introducing Kratos' wife as new protagonist From the review corner If you have been thinking about capturing the night sky, the DWARF mini is the world's smallest smart telescope for night-and-day sky captures, which Steven reviewed this week. For an amateur astronomer spending $399, the telescope offers premium build quality, automated tracking, and a low learning curve. However, the tracking may not always work straight away, and the connection can be finicky. GEEKOM Air12 2026 Edition It's a small mini PC from GEEKOM fitted with an Intel Tiger Lake Pentium Gold 7505, up to 16GB of RAM, and up to a 512GB SSD. 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Its 1.57-inch display with 700 nits max brightness is the main highlight, capable of showing total output power, current temperature, power distribution across ports, and more. 007 First Light Pulasthi's review of 007 First Light said the game delivers an immersive, globe-trotting origin story for James Bond, packed inside a tightly choreographed action game. It features over-the-top action sequences, Bond's right amount of overconfidence, and satisfying gunplay. On the other hand, stealth can be too predictable, enemy AI is not very bright, and the missing FOV slider is a pain. More price drops! We got you covered with some hot tech deals all week. For some reason, if you missed out on a great discount, here is a summary of some recent deals that are still alive: Samsung 990 PRO SSD 2TB NVMe - $389.99 (39% off) Sonos Sub 4 - Wireless Subwoofer - $759 (16% off) Logitech MX Creative Console - $159.99 (20% off) To view all of our recent deals, click here. So, these were some of the biggest tech news and other updates from this week. There will be more issues of our 7 Days series in the coming weeks and months, so stay tuned. You can also support Neowin by registering for a free member account or subscribing to extra member benefits, along with an ad-free tier option. Have a great weekend!
    • Thanks, Sony and Nintendo, you effectively killed platform-agnostic gaming. Long gone are the days when you could wish to play a specific game on whatever platform you were. Now, you have to buy the hardware just to play that single game. What, you're only interested in THAT game and nothing more? Bad luck, suck it and buy our console.
    • The AI data centers need it more than us so...let them gobble it all up at that price!
    • "CRAZIER than ever!" Crazy Taxi: World Tour is officially coming soon by Pulasthi Ariyasinghe Sega announced it is working on bringing back some of its classic franchises in 2023, and while it has taken some time, the company finally gave fans a look at one of these new projects at the Xbox Games Showcase today, which turned out to be a brand-new Crazy Taxi entry. Watch the debut trailer above, which has snippets of gameplay in between the cinematic bits while blasting a track from The Offspring. Dubbed Crazy Taxi World Tour, this installment is aptly being described as being "CRAZIER than ever!" The director behind the original, Kenji Kanno, is helming this new entry as well, which will come with access to five new cities to drive in, competitive multiplayer modes, a vehicle customization system, and more. Axel is returning as a protagonist as well, but this time a mystery driver is offering him the opportunity to take his adventures to the streets in other countries. This will involve Axel chasing down masked villains that have somehow stolen his taxi, which means even more extreme missions and challenges to overcome. "From transporting passengers at top speed to tackling unique side missions and odd jobs across dynamic maps, there are countless ways to drive crazy and rake in big money," says Sega about this new installment after over 20 years. "Perform outrageous drifts, catch insane air, and drive at crazy speeds across five different cities as you work to deliver passengers and complete a variety of missions and challenges." The studio has even confirmed an in-game Arcade Mode that players will be able to access containing the original games for plenty of nostalgic action. Crazy Taxi: World Tour is currently slated to release sometime in 2027 across PC, Xbox Series X|S, PlayStation 5, and Nintendo Switch 2.
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