![]() ![]() At this point things can still be enabled or disabled but new features are not usually added at this stage - generally only bug fixes are accepted at this point.Īfter this they will be moved into release and everyone will have them. At this point these features should be considered mostly done and mostly stable. Aside from supporting a wide range of extensions (even Tampermoneky, so you can use your userscripts from the desktop version), it now is able to open PDFs within the browser (just like Safari on iOS) and it's the first Android browser (that I know about) which can do that. Once the features have had a time to "bake" they will then end up in the beta channel for more testing. Recently Firefox Nightly had a few amazing updates. If you can deal with potential crashes and reporting bugs then this could be the channel choice for you. ![]() It's one of the reasons Mozilla is encouraging people to use the nightly browser at the moment. It's a pretty critical phase as without a good number of testers there are likely to be bugs exposed during later phases when a wider audience get access to them. Firefox Developer Edition is a specially themed version of Firefox Beta, meaning both are future Firefox 89, currently on beta release 13 about 2/3 of the way through the beta cycle. That is features that are unfinished, not fully tested and so on. -) Firefox, regular release, is version 88.0.1. These are brand new and "unbaked" features. The main difference you'll see if that you'll get all of the new features on Nightly and it updates twice a day. ![]()
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