I thought FF8 was supposed to have official support for a 64 bit version? Not finding anything about it? I am disappoint.
you might want to read through this post http://forums.mozillazine.org/viewtopic.php?f=23&t=2348759I thought FF8 was supposed to have official support for a 64 bit version? Not finding anything about it? I am disappoint.
The only thing I hated was the new icon for no favorite icon I had to change it back.
How did you change it back?
you might want to read through this post http://forums.mozillazine.org/viewtopic.php?f=23&t=2348759
Thanks, that's the solution in the link I made above. Was wondering if it was a different solution.This userstyle code I found online.
#page-proxy-favicon:not(src),
#tabbrowser-tabs .tab-icon-image:not(src),
#personal-bookmarks .bookmark-item .toolbarbutton-icon:not(src) {
list-style-image: url("chrome://global/skin/icons/folder-item.png")!important;
-moz-image-region: rect(0px, 16px, 16px, 0px)!important;
}
- Add-ons installed by third party programs are now disabled by default
- Added a one-time add-on selection dialog to manage previously installed add-ons
- Added Twitter to the search bar
- Added a preference to load tabs on demand, improving start-up time when windows are restored
- Improved tab animations when moving, reordering, or detaching tabs
- Improved performance and memory handling
- Added CORS support for cross-domain textures in WebGL
- Added support for HTML5 context menus
- Added support for insertAdjacentHTML
- Improved CSS hyphen support for many languages
- Improved WebSocket support
- Fixed several stability issues
i asked this question for you here http://forums.mozillazine.org/viewtopic.php?f=23&t=2358701 will let you know what they sayBut have they managed to make it run at Low integrity level as a safeguard yet? Anyone here know?
And yeah, 64-bit wouldn't hurt. I see Adobe tweaked 64-bit Flash Player to take advantage of the address space to provide more robust ASLR.
hmmm just hope that this new update doesn't suck like when no. 7 was out;
Why are they upping their versions so quickly?
it is called rapid release and is explained here http://blog.mozilla.com/channels/2011/07/18/every-six-weeks/Why are they upping their versions so quickly?
i asked this question for you here http://forums.mozillazine.org/viewtopic.php?f=23&t=2358701 will let you know what they say
go to that link i posted, there is link there to set it too what you want via command promptActually I can check using Sysinternals Process Monitor, I'm just being lazy. One moment here...
![]()
Unfortunately they're still running at Medium integrity. So an exploit would gain the same privileges as the user, rather than being stuck in a Low-integrity padded cell.
C'mon Mozilla, you talk big about security, now try to include at least as much security as IE7![]()