Friday, January 7, 2011

mozilla Firefox 3.6

Mozilla Firefox 3.6
Mozilla Firefox IconMozilla Firefox wordmark
Firefox 3.6 Screenshot.png
Firefox 3.6 displaying Wikipedia on GNU/Linux.
Developer(s) Mozilla Corporation
Mozilla Foundation
Initial release January 21, 2010 (2010-01-21)
Stable release 3.6.13  (December 9, 2010; 29 days ago (2010-12-09)) [+/−]
Preview release [+/−]
Written in C++, XUL, XBL, JavaScript,[1] CSS[2]
Operating system Windows
Mac OS X
Linux
BSD
Solaris
OpenSolaris
Engine Gecko
Platform Cross-platform
Size 9.8 MB (Linux)
18.7 MB (Mac OS X)
8.2 MB (Windows)
(all archived)
Available in 75 languages
Development status Active
Type Web browser
FTP client
Gopher client
License MPL/GNU GPL/GNU LGPL/about:rights
Website www.mozilla.com/firefox






mozilla Firefox 3.6 is a version of the Mozilla Firefox web browser released in January 2010. The release's main improvement over Firefox 3.5 is improved performance (due to further speed improvements in the TraceMonkey JavaScript engine). It uses the Gecko 1.9.2 engine (compared to 1.9.1 in FF 3.5), which improves compliance with web standards. It was codenamed Namoroka.[5]
This release marks the beginning of a new development cycle for Firefox. As well as receiving major updates, the browser will also receive minor updates with new features. This is to allow users to receive new features quicker. This new development approach means that Mozilla's product road map will also be updated. Mike Beltzner, Mozilla's director of Firefox, and Mike Shaver, Mozilla's vice president of engineering, hope to release a new roadmap that reflects the changes.[6]

[edit] Development

Development for this version started on December 1, 2008.[7] The first alpha of version 3.6 was released on August 7, 2009,[8] the first beta was released on October 30,[9] Beta 2 was released on November 10, Beta 3 was released on November 17, Beta 4 was released on November 26, Beta 5 was released on December 17,[10] Release Candidate 1 was released January 8, Release Candidate 2 was released on January 17,[11] and the final version was released on January 21.

[edit] Minor releases

Firefox 3.6.2 was released on March 23, 2010,[12] followed by version 3.6.3 on April 1[13] which closed some bugs in the ASLR and DEP handling found at the Pwn2Own contest 2010.
The Firefox developers created a new feature called Lorentz. It is named after the Lorentz National Park. A preview version of Lorentz, Firefox 3.6.3plugin1, was made available on April 8, 2010.[14] Betas of Firefox 3.6.4 were made available starting on April 20, 2010. Firefox 3.6.4 was released on June 22, 2010.[15][16] The Windows and Linux versions incorporate out-of-process plug-ins (OOPP), which isolates execution of plug-ins (Adobe Flash, Apple Quicktime and Microsoft Silverlight by default) into a separate process.[6][17] This significantly reduces the number of Firefox crashes experienced by users who are watching online videos or playing games;[18] the user can simply refresh the page to continue. Mozilla states that 30% of browser crashes are caused by third-party plugins.[19]
Support for other plug-ins by default in OOPP and on the Mac OS X platform will become available in Firefox 4.[20]
Firefox 3.6.6 lengthens the amount of time a plug-in is allowed to be unresponsive to the point before the plug-in quits.[21]
Firefox 3.6.7 was a security and stability update that fixed several issues.[22]
Firefox 3.6.8 was a security update that was released a mere three days after 3.6.7, to fix another security fault.[23]
Firefox 3.6.9, in addition to fixing security and stability issues, introduced support for the X-FRAME-OPTIONS HTTP response header to help prevent clickjacking.[24]
Firefox 3.6.10 was a security and stability update that fixed several issues.[25]
Firefox 3.6.11 was a security and stability update that fixed several issues.[26]
Firefox 3.6.12 was a security update that fixed a critical security issue.[27]
Firefox 3.6.13 is a security and stability update that fixes several issues.[28]
Firefox 3.6.14 is tentatively scheduled for February 8.[29]

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