Lawreston
En-Route
Has anyone installed Firefox to iPhone, iPad, iPod since it was announced as available for same?
HR
HR
NO
But I HAD it on Android tablet and it isn't the same product used on real computers === and the app sucks (and that's a GROSS understatement) --- use Chrome
I think Firefox has gone way downhill. I used it in the Windows 3X period when Explorer was too vulnerable to malware, but then eventually Firefox became exploited. Chrome is the least problematic.
Admittedly not an answer to your question but, when Firefox exercised their right to fire someone for making a campaign donation to a cause that they didn't approve of, I exercised my right to uninstall it from everything that I had it on. Haven't missed it.
Talking about the PC-based browser. Works just fine. Every time I get annoyed at Chrome I move back to it (like for the past 3 months). In fact, it seems to some Google things better than Chrome. Imagine my surprise when using Google Voice just worked in FireFox and didn't require the gymnastics I had to go through in Chrome.Firefox still exists?
It's been broken for years.
OK, I should have said "Mozilla"
http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2014/04/04/mozilla-ceo-resignation-free-speech/7328759/
I don't like the overturning of limits on campaign contributions either but I think the question of whether money is speech or not is that cut and dried.You also mischaracterized his resignation as a "firing." It was nothing of the sort. The public objected to his donation. Free speech does not include freedom from criticism. Nor is it particularly valid to claim paying someone is speech (despite what the Supreme Court has said).
Have you looked at the Terms of Service for Chrome?
IANAL nor did I stay at a HIE, but the TOS looks like the user must let the Chrome software install updates, all updates.
I don't like the overturning of limits on campaign contributions either but I think the question of whether money is speech or not is that cut and dried.
Personally, I think when I spend money on a political button or T-shirt or bumper sticker, I am exercising free speech, even if I don't wear them. No one can force me to spend it on a candidate or cause I don't support any more than they can force me to say I support them.
Same for when I decide not to spend my money in business establishments that support positions I find repulsive. If that's "not particularly valid" to you, so be it.
So boycotting FireFox - was that speech? What if FireFox was a pay-for?
You also mischaracterized his resignation as a "firing." It was nothing of the sort. The public objected to his donation. Free speech does not include freedom from criticism. Nor is it particularly valid to claim paying someone is speech (despite what the Supreme Court has said).
I too have given persons the option of resigning or being fired. It doesn't matter to me what you think. The situation mattered to me enough to decide that I wanted nothing more to do with Mozilla.
So, who "gave him the option?"
There are no shareholders, and he's in charge.
Have you looked recently? That's quickly becoming the standard. Microsoft in Windows 10, Adobe Acrobat Reader DC, others. The push is to get you to use the cloud where your data can be mined even deeper.
I looked at the Chrome TOS just before my post.
It'll be a cold day in Hell before I plop stuff in the cloud.
(And it probably won't surprise you that I don't have any windows machines)
This post is in the cloud.