Firefox 3.5 forges ahead with strong developer support, but most improvements for casual users will probably strike them as minor.
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Video without plug-ins
The big feature in Firefox 3.5 is deep support for CSS media tags, HTML5 and native support for embedded Ogg Theora/Vorbis files. This means that you can watch video or stream audio without a plug-in shaking up your browser's stability. There's not a lot of it out there now, but expect that to change in the next year.
(Credit: Seth Rosenblatt/CNET)
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Tab ripping and returning
Many of the changes in Firefox 3.5 are under the hood or laying groundwork for the future. One new feature that's got some visual pop is the ability to rip tabs off into new windows or merge multiple windows into the tab bar. Unlike Google Chrome, these tabs are not sandboxed.
(Credit: Seth Rosenblatt/CNET)
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Firefox 3.5 knows where you live
Firefox 3.5 might not know where you live precisely, but using Google's geo-locating tech, it can come a lot closer than you think. If it freaks you out to know that your browser can use your IP address to figure out where you and your computer are, you can turn it off through about:config.
(Credit: Seth Rosenblatt/CNET)
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Geolocation: Not all evil
Using Google's tech, the geolocation feature can help narrow down vague search queries to more specific, region-based results.
(Credit: Seth Rosenblatt/CNET)
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Improving data removal
Firefox 3 offered a Clear Private Data option for wiping cookies, history, and other browsing tracks in one hit. Firefox 3.5 improves upon that in two ways.
(Credit: Seth Rosenblatt/CNET)
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Data removal gets granular
Firefox 3.5 offers far more control to users for choosing which browsing tracks get kept and which get killed. In the Clear Recent History option, which replaces Clear Private Data, users can search and destroy not only by the kind of browsing track recorded, but also by the time that you visited that page, accessed that cookie, or used that form.
(Credit: Seth Rosenblatt/CNET)
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Remove that one site
You can also remove a single Web site from your browsing tracks. Go to your History window, right-click on any site, and choose Forget About This Site. It won't work on sub-domains, but nevertheless it's still a powerful track-tweaking tool.
(Credit: Seth Rosenblatt/CNET)
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Firefox finally gets Private Browsing
Firefox has had Private Browsing in development on and off for about four years. When Google decided to make the browsing-without-tracks a debut feature in Chrome — nevermind that Safari had already been offering it for years — Firefox decided it was time to pull the curtain, too.
(Credit: Seth Rosenblatt/CNET)
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Fastest Firefox yet
Firefox 3.5 is twice as fast as last year's Firefox 3, but it's still not as fast as Google Chrome or Apple Safari when it comes to JavaScript.
(Credit: Seth Rosenblatt/CNET)
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Tab tweak
Firefox 3.5 slightly redoes the look of the tab control buttons, at least in Windows XP.
(Credit: Seth Rosenblatt/CNET)







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