pwshub.com

Firefox 130 lands with a yawn, but 131 teases a key upgrade

Firefox 130 is landing on users' machines, while version 131 enters beta — with a feature we've all been waiting for.

The latest version of Firefox is here, less than a month after its predecessor – which was chiefly notable because it got not one but two bug-fix releases. (And yes, we do know that Firefox 128 is already up to its third, but that's different. As we said in July, version 128 is an extended support release, so it has about another year ahead of it.)

Version 130 is not a hugely exciting release, in The Reg FOSS desk's humble opinion. It's the new beta that's a bit more interesting, but we'll get to that.

The new current version has two notable features. Firefox is getting smarter about handling discrete blocks of text within a web page, and a visible aspect is that 130 supports partial translations of web pages. Just over a year ago, Firefox's in-browser translation became available if you tweaked its settings. In version 118, translation was enabled by default.

Firefox 131's new Settings page, in a vertical tab, alongside a picture-in-picture video. - Click to enlarge

The thing is that the real human world is messy, and it's quite common to encounter a web page that's mostly in one language, but contains bits that are in another. If you don't speak either of those languages, that's a problem. So now, after Firefox 130 translates a web page from one language to your preferred one, you can now highlight a block of text and translate just that bit to or from something else.

Under Settings, there's also a new Labs page, which lets you enable experimental features. This reminds us of the comparable feature in Gmail, which sadly disappeared about three years ago, taking selective quoting in email replies with it. For now, Firefox 130's experimental features are one we'll never use, and one we probably won't want. You can add a so-called AI Chatbot feature in a sidebar for all your automated plagiarism needs – and if you switch tabs away from one playing a video, the video can automatically shrink into a picture-in-picture mode and follow you.

There are some other, less visible changes, too. There's Curve25519 encryption support, which we'd never heard of, but if Daniel J Bernstein approves of it then it's probably a good thing. For us mere mortals, Firefox can now randomly generate and suggest secure passwords, which sounds great – so long as you use a password manager to remember them for you.

The cool new thing we've been waiting to see is in the beta of the forthcoming Firefox 131. This offers tab previews when you hover the pointer over a tab, and not mentioned in the release notes, it may be able to block cookie banners, which would be handy. The feature we liked best is the integrated vertical tabs support. For us, this worked well in testing. Like the default one in the new forked Zen browser, the sidebar defaults to being tiny and only showing page icons, but that's enough to make it very useful.

This is doable in current versions via a choice of extensions, but as we described back in 2022, you also have to mess around enabling user CSS customization, adding your own stylesheet and so on to make it look nice. Now, it's just there, a few clicks away.

It's good to see Mozilla making some slightly more significant changes to its flagship product. Firefox's market share is tiny these days, but then, so is that of Linux on the desktop – and yet, it's a very significant player all the same, especially via Chromebooks. Size, as they say, is no guarantee of strength. More power to the lizard's elbow.

Source: theregister.com

Related stories
1 month ago - Researchers have discovered a vulnerability that allows hackers to gain direct access to services on your laptop through browsers like Chrome, Firefox, Safari and Edge.
1 week ago - According to the official Firefox release calendar, the extended support release version of the Firefox web browser will continue to receive updates through at least March 4, 2025. Firefox 115 ESR was originally expected to end support...
1 month ago - Can't reach someone's private server on localhost from outside? No problem A years-old security oversight has been addressed in basically all web browsers – Chromium-based browsers, including Microsoft Edge and Google Chrome, WebKit...
1 month ago - Proton VPN, one of the most popular virtual private network services around, has released a new free browser extension after previously reserving it as a paid perk. It works across all Chromium-based browsers, including Google Chrome and...
1 month ago - According to the latest data from web traffic analysts StatCounter, Chrome still sits unchallenged at the front of the class with a market share of 64.73 percent. Microsoft's Edge – not Firefox or Safari as you might have guessed – is the...
Other stories
4 minutes ago - Those anxiously waiting to place a pre-order for a PlayStation 5 Pro might want to hold on a second. Sony just announced that it is releasing a 30th-anniversary edition that harkens back to the days of PlayStation yore. The deck comes in...
4 minutes ago - Football is back, and you can see every snap, tackle and touchdown for a single affordable price with Hulu + Live TV. You also get access to your favorite shows and thousands of on-demand movies from Hulu and Disney+.
4 minutes ago - Whether you're excited for the World Series, the NFL, NHL, NBA, or college sports, Hulu + Live TV gives you comprehensive coverage of all of this fall's biggest leagues and matchups in one place for a single affordable price–plus...
4 minutes ago - Apple released the first public beta of iOS 18.1 on Thursday, less than a week after the tech giant released iOS 18 to the general public. iOS 18...
4 minutes ago - The best solar installation company can make your life easier by helping guide you through the process of permitting and installation. Here are the ones we recommend.