Skip to main content

Mozilla rolls out Firefox 5 beta

Following up on its pledge to step up its release schedule, Mozilla has unleashed the first beta of Firefox 5. The release follows hot on the heels of the debut of Firefox 4 and contains relatively few new features: the two most important are support for a CSS animation standard (which has yet to be approved by the W3C but is already implemented in Google Chrome and Apple Safari) and the implementation of a “channel switcher” that lets users who want to live on the bleeding edge of Firefox flip between “Aurora” (pre-beta, but QA’d), Beta, and Release versions of Firefox.

Firefox 5 channels
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Firefox 5 doesn’t include any major revisions to the application’s user interface, which got a semi-substantial makeover in Firefox 4, and in many cases users are still trying to adjust to the changes. However, in addition to the two many new features above, Firefox 5 also rolls in a number of less-visible changes and bug fixes, detailed in the beta release notes.

Recommended Videos

Mozilla anticipates moving Firefox 5 into release channel towards the end of June. Firefox 6 is scheduled for early August, and the end of the year might even see the release of Firefox 9.

The strategy is intended to help Firefox keep up with the likes of Google Chrome and Opera: where Chrome and Opera have typically released major version updates every couple months, Firefox has been set on a schedule of more-monolithic releases, with major revisions coming only after long intervals. Although Mozilla has been aggressive about getting bug fixes and security updates out to users, the more-aggressive release schedule should enable Firefox to get new features to users sooner. Even Internet Explorer has taken on a more aggressive release schedule, announcing a developer preview of Internet Explorer 10 shortly after IE 9 hit the streets—the move leaves Apple’s Safari as the only major browser looking at a traditional release schedule.

Geoff Duncan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
Now Apple has no excuse to keep 5G out of the MacBook
Man using an Apple Pencil with Apple iPad Pro with M1 chip.

When Apple revealed the new iPad Pro at its Spring Loaded event, the biggest news was the fact it will now use the desktop-class M1 chip instead of the previous A-series processor. As well as that, it also comes kitted out with super-fast 5G connectivity -- full millimeter-wave 5G, no less. That raises an interesting question, though: Why hasn’t Apple made a 5G MacBook yet?

You may think 5G is a purely mobile technology, and that it makes most sense inside a mobile device like the iPhone 12 or the iPad Pro. Yet is a MacBook not also a truly mobile device? There are plenty of similar-sized laptops with 5G support already out on the market. Also, Apple’s maniacal quest for the ultimate thin and light laptop means the MacBook Air does not weigh much more than a 12.9-inch iPad Pro, and both are absolutely portable.

Read more
Mozilla Firefox’s new feature will make it harder for ISPs to spy on you
firefox chrome back end mozilla symbol hq headquarters building sign convention open source

Mozilla is pressing ahead with its controversial DNS-over-HTTPS (DoH) feature that many across the United States and the United Kingdom have lobbied against. The update will add an additional layer of encryption to your internet traffic and makes it more difficult for ISPs to snoop on your browsing data.

Whenever you punch in a web address, the browser queries a dedicated server to process that human-readable domain name into an IP address to find out where that website is actually located. Called DNS Lookup, it is the first step a browser takes to load your website. But since this process is not encrypted, it’s easy prey for internet carriers and allows them to potentially keep tabs on what websites you visit.

Read more
Nvidia celebrates Trump, slams Biden for putting AI in jeopardy
The Nvidia RTX 5090 GPU.

In response to new export restrictions placed on AI GPUs, Nvidia posted a scathing blog criticizing the outgoing Biden-Harris administration. The administration's Interim Final Rule on Artificial Intelligence Diffusion largely targets China with restrictions on AI GPUs, according to Newsweek.

Nvidia disagrees. "While cloaked in the guise of an 'anti-China' measure, these rules would do nothing to enhance U.S. security. The new rules would control technology worldwide, including technology that is already widely available in mainstream gaming PCs and consumer hardware. Rather than mitigate any threat, the new Biden rules would only weaken America’s global competitiveness, undermining the innovation that has kept the U.S. ahead," wrote Nvidia's vice president of government of affairs Ned Finkle.

Read more