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Firefox 3 Features

The internet community has been looking forward to the opening run of the new Firefox. The change from the main version 2.xx to 3.0 promises marked advancement. Firefox 3 became available on June 17th when Mozilla wanted to achieve a  download record. The company hoped for 5 million downloads in a World Record attempt. The Web browser surpassed that goal, ending up with over 8 million downloads in a 24 hour window. Three days after "Download Day" Firefox 3 downloads were over 14 million. Beyond opening day an additional 6 million people downloaded the newest update.

Firefox is the open-source Web browser software developed by Mozilla, the not-for-profit organization that arose from the ashes of Netscape, which developed the original commercial browser. Since the first version of Firefox debuted in late 2004, it has been stealing a growing number of users away from Microsoft's Internet Explorer (IE), the dominant browser software. Firefox has tended to offer innovations long before Microsoft incorporated such features into IE. Among those that Firefox pioneered are tabbed browsing, which allows users to call up multiple Web pages in one browser window, and a search bar that's integrated into the browser. The latest version is no different. The marquee feature is something the Mozilla folks call the "Awesome Bar." Essentially what it does is turn the location bar into something very like a search engine. Instead of typing a Web address into the bar to pull up a site, you can type key words. Firefox will compare those with the URLs, page titles and tags - short site descriptions you've written - of sites you've bookmarked or recently visited. As you type, it offers a short list of possible matches.

Firefox 3 is fast!! The Mozilla folks have sped up the browser's script engine - used on Google's Gmail and many other Web sites - and quickened its ability to display images. They've also improved the way that Firefox uses system memory, limiting the effect the program can have on overall performance even with numerous tabs open. 

But there are other subtler features that make Firefox stand out. Let's take a look at several of them. These are from the Firefox website.

1. Make your browser as efficient as you can imagine. Your browsing history (all the websites you’ve seen) and your bookmarks (all the websites you’ve saved) are archived in the Library, where they can be easily searched and organized. You can also save your frequent searches in dynamic smart folders that automatically update as your bookmark list and history grow.

2. Label a site with names or categories that are meaningful to you. For example, you can label the site www.bbc.co.uk with the “news” tag as well as the “foreign investments” tag, plus give www.nytimes.com the “news” tag, too. When you enter “news” into the location bar, both sites will be shown as results. A single site can have multiple tags, and there’s no limit to the number of tags you can create. You may not remember the exact name of a site, but with a tag, you’ll be able to find it in a way that makes sense to you.

3. A quick way to get to the sites you love—even the ones with addresses you only vaguely remember. The new Firefox 3 location bar learns as you use it—it’s so highly evolved that we like to call it the “Awesome Bar”. Over time, it adapts to your preferences and offers better fitting matches. Type in a term and the autocomplete function includes possible matching sites from your browsing history, as well as sites you’ve bookmarked and tagged in a drop down. For example, you could enter the tag: “investments” to find “www.fool.com”. Matched terms are highlighted, making the list of results easy to scan.

4. Manage your bookmarks a lot or a little. One click on the star icon at the end of the location bar bookmarks a site. Two clicks and you can choose where to save it and whether to tag it. File bookmarked sites in easy-to-access folders and organize according to theme (like “job search” or “favorite shopping”). Find your bookmarked sites in a flash by entering the tag, page or bookmark name into the location bar. The more you use your tags and bookmark names in the location bar, the more the system will adapt to your preferences.

5. Want to be extra sure about a site’s legitimacy before you make a purchase? Click on a site favicon for an instant identity overview. Another click digs deeper: how many times have you visited? Are your passwords saved? Check up on suspicious sites, avoid Web forgeries and make sure a site is what it claims to be.

6. Firefox 3 protects you from viruses, worms, trojan horses and spyware. If you accidentally access an attack site, you’ll receive a full-sized browser message as a warning. A continuously updated list of attack-sites tells us when to stop you from browsing, so there’s nothing for you to update or maintain. It also integrates elegantly with your antivirus software. When you download a file, your computer’s antivirus program automatically checks it to protect you against viruses and other malware, which could otherwise attack your computer. [available in Windows only]. Firefox gets a fresh update of web forgery sites 48 times in a day, so if you try to visit a fraudulent site that’s pretending to be a site you trust (like your bank), a browser message—big as life—will stop you.  Choose to “remember” site passwords without intrusive pop-ups. Now you’ll see the “remember password” notification integrated into your view at the top of the site page.

7. An all new manager lets you download seamlessly, with even greater security. A pause and resume feature means there’s no need to wait for a download to finish before you disconnect. So, if you’re halfway through the latest White Stripes album and it’s time to catch the bus, just pause and pick up downloading when you get home. The resume function also works if your system crashes or is forced to restart. The manager shows your download progress and lets you search your files by name or the Web address where the download came from. A built-in spell checker lets you enter text directly into Web pages— without worrying about typos and misspellings. Work directly with the Web and save yourself a step. Visit your favorite news page and read the caption under the picture—or view the picture itself in a size you can see. An elegant new zoom feature lets you swoop in and see entire web pages. They scale in the way you’d expect them to, with all the elements of a page’s layout expanding equally, so you can zero in on what matters.

8. If you want to save time and bandwidth, view a site without images. Firefox will remember your setting the next time you view the page.

 

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This page was last updated on Monday, July 21, 2008