Breaking News

Firefox Post-Quantum , Firefox 58 Packs Additional Multi-Threading in Firefox new tab page



Firefox Quantum’s launch late last year gave the world an impressive look at what a major rewrite could do for the browser, and it remains an excellent piece of software several months later. The new Firefox 58, which dropped yesterday, introduces new features and capabilities of its own, setting the stage for additional enhancements later this year.
One major feature? The use of Off-Main-Thread Painting, or OMTP. Here’s how Mozilla explains the new capability:

otmp
In Firefox 58, the painting process (the act of actually drawing all the pixels of a web page) has been moved to its own thread.
The main thread of a browser is always a scarce commodity. It runs the page’s scripts, responds to user input, and maintains the current state of the page. Prior to OMTP (Off-Main-Thread Painting), the current state of the page was converted to drawing commands, and the pixel data of the whole page was generated (or rasterized) on the main thread. This meant the performance-critical tasks of scrolling or animation or script could be interrupted, or that a script could cause dropped frames or “jank”.
With OMTP on the other hand, the visual state of the page is still computed on the main thread, but the potentially costly task of rasterization is passed off to a designated “rasterization thread”, and the main thread can carry on and stay responsive.
To keep CPU usage lower overall, Firefox 58 also begins throttling background tab timers. They’ll still fire, but at a reduced rate. This won’t apply to tabs playing media in the background, or those that require active CPU time to function.


This joke has nothing to do with this story. Life is just too short not to mock Internet Explorer.
There are also new improvements to Firefox’s screenshot capability — you can access it through the three dots next to the address bar, and seriously, I’m using it all the time these days — some JavaScript handling changes to improve page loads, and some font handling changes.
On a personal note, if you couldn’t tell already, I’m still quite impressed with Firefox Quantum. Yes, Mozilla got some egg on its face over its Mr. Robot promotion last month, but the browser as a whole is a remarkable improvement over previous versions. Your mileage may, as always, vary but I’ve been quite happy with it. Certainly happier than I was with any previous iteration of the browser in recent memory. So far, there’s no indication that Quantum has helped stem Firefox’s downward slide — Statcounter and Netmarketshare both suggest it continues to decline, but since those stats are global, they might not pick up country-specific shifts.
Not long after Quantum debuted, Mozilla noted it had seen a 44 percent jump in downloads from Chrome users, a 24 percent uplift on mobile, and that the new version was snapped up more quickly than previous products. Hopefully we see signs of that reflected in user share in coming months.
Note: Firefox is talking up its Tracking Protection and other features around user privacy with Firefox 58, but as far as I can tell, these features all actually went in with Firefox 57. It’s still a good idea to read up on the tracking stuff if you weren’t previously aware of it, but I haven’t called it out as a new feature the way the Firefox blog implies because, as far as can tell, it isn’t.
It’s been a few years since Mozilla scrapped its program to show sponsored tiles on the new tab page of the Firefox web browser. Now it looks like the organization is giving the idea another try.
Things are a little different this time around though. When you open a new tab in Firefox you see a mix of content including frequently visited sites and recommendations, which are now powered by Pocket, which Mozilla acquired last year.
Since Firefox 57 “Quantum” was released in late 2017, content recommendations have come from Pocket, and Mozilla has recently started testing personalized recommendations for some users. Sponsored recommendations are the next step.




Initially, Mozilla says only a “small portion of US users” will see sponsored recommendations. But if the move turns out to be less controversial this time than it was the last time Mozilla tried to make money by essentially placing ads in the browser, you can expect it to roll out to more users in the future.
One key difference between these sponsored recommendations and most ads is that Mozilla says none of your personal data is collected or sent to advertisers. Everything happens locally within your browser.
Right now that means that the more you use Firefox 57 or Firefox 58 to surf the web, the more likely you are to get personalized article recommendations for content you’re likely to see. Theoretically the same thing should be true of the sponsored recommendations.
Of course most ads on the internet are tailored to your interests based on your web surfing habits, but plenty of people find those ads annoying. It sounds like Mozilla is betting that at least some people find the tracking of personal data by third parties to be more objectionable than the targeting of ads.
Anyway, Mozilla currently makes most of its money from deals with search providers and donations. Advertising would open up another revenue stream… if Mozilla can find a way to do it without annoying the Firefox user base.
Firefox 57,Firefox 58,Mozilla says only,“Quantum”, Mozilla scrapped,Firefox user base,Firefox Quantum

No comments