Corrine Administrator, Microsoft MVP, Security Analyst Staff member Joined Feb 22, 2012 Posts 12,064 Location Upstate, NY Dec 10, 2020 #1 Personally, I stopped using Firefox when Mozilla started with the "rapid release program". However, from Endangered Firefox: The state of Mozilla, it appears that Mozilla has more problems than the loss of users. They will even be moving out of thes Mountain View, CA office when its lease ends in January.
Personally, I stopped using Firefox when Mozilla started with the "rapid release program". However, from Endangered Firefox: The state of Mozilla, it appears that Mozilla has more problems than the loss of users. They will even be moving out of thes Mountain View, CA office when its lease ends in January.
britechguy Well-known member Joined Jun 2, 2016 Posts 772 Location Staunton, VA Dec 10, 2020 #2 Well, Firefox is far from alone in the "rapid release" category. Chrome (and most of the other Chromium-based browsers) roll 'em out with great speed and regularity. I think that the age of "{insert OS or application here} As A Service" has pretty much come far and wide, if not universally.
Well, Firefox is far from alone in the "rapid release" category. Chrome (and most of the other Chromium-based browsers) roll 'em out with great speed and regularity. I think that the age of "{insert OS or application here} As A Service" has pretty much come far and wide, if not universally.
x BlueRobot Administrator Staff member Joined May 7, 2013 Posts 10,191 Location %systemroot% Dec 11, 2020 #3 I haven't used Firefox for years now, I tend to use Brave and Pale Moon.