Mozilla releases Firefox 3.5

Firefox 3.5, the embodiment of Mozilla's attempt to "upgrade the web," is now available for Windows and Mac.

Firefox 3.5 has a range of new features, including a new JavaScript engine for faster web applications such as Google Docs; the ability to show video built into web pages without plug-ins; a private browsing mode; fancy downloadable fonts; and geolocation technology that can let websites know where you are.

"So much is happening on the web right now, it's a great time for browsers," said John Lilly, CEO of Firefox backer Mozilla, in a statement. And, he boasted, "Firefox 3.5 brings together the most innovative web technologies and delivers them in the most complete and powerful modern browser."

With the software released, Mozilla programmers and their open source comrades now can move on to the next round of updates, to encouraging web developers to build in support for the new features, and to finalising new standards such as HTML 5.

Firefox broke Microsoft's lock on the browser market, but it now faces other challenges, chiefly Apple's Safari and Google's Chrome.

Mozilla released Firefox 3.5 in 70 different languages, taking advantage of the relatively broad internationalisation that's more feasible with open source software.

Through revenue that comes from search ads, Google supplied Mozilla with $66 million of its $75 million in 2007 revenue, the last year for which figures are publicly available.

Mozilla has published a live download tracker site. It's showing the worldwide rate between about 80 and 100 downloads per second at present.

Talkback 2 comments

    Not usable for me tony -- 02/07/09

    I tried upgrading from Firefox 3.0.11 on KDE on Centos 5.3 which I've been using for a year or two without any problems & has been extremely stable.

    Bad Idea. Firefox 3.5 started crashing almost immediately. When I try to visit some of my regular web sites (like SMH for example). Not only did the browser crash, it crashed entire X windows environment. I've downgraded back to version 3.0.11 - I don't need a hobby - I want a stable, usable platform.

    I suspect trying to embed the media stuff is probably what's causing the problem, but I never get a chance to find out, as it crashes the whole system...

    Blame CentOS Some Guy -- 02/07/09 (in reply to #320147121)

    I wouldn't blame Firefox - it's more likely that the problem is with CentOS and the way it's been built.

    For what it's worth, I have seen no issues under Gentoo.

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