Firefox 4.0′s Possible Design
I'm really loving the new design images of Firefox 4.0 with the tabs on top. The title bar is quite pointless in most scenarios, as most of the time, the most relavent part of the title is on the tab itself. If I need to read more than that, mousing over it will serve that purpose.
Here's a screenshot:

In addition to those changes, other commonly unused parts of the interface will be minimized, saving even more precious space. Head over to Mashable.com to read Stan Schroeder's comments.
Since March, Internet Explorer Lost 11.4% Share to Firefox, Safari, and Chrome
Quite interesting; Microsoft's browser IE seems to be loosing some of it's popularity, quite fast too.
Read the original article at TechCrunch.com.
Some of my favorite Firefox extensions
These are some of my favorite extensions. They aren't in any particular order (well, actually, alphabetical because I was going down the Add-on's window as I wrote this), and they're all great to me.
Download Statusbar - One of the neatest space savers for your browser, especially if you download a lot (I do). Instead of staring at that Downloads window, look at a downloads bar, which appears above your status bar. As you can see in the screenshot (-->), it shows progress of each file as well as the current speed over the remaining download time. This sort of information is better at a glance than in its own window.
Faviconize Tab - Ever find yourself multi-tasking, and then realizing your tabs bar has way too many tabs on there? Especially considering, you know what most of them are just by glancing at their favicon. Well, this extension removes the text, and instead, shows the favicon for tabs that you (by default) double click--saving space. What's also handy is the setting that lets you automatically 'Faviconize' tabs based on their URL. A personal usage for this is Gmail, which I always have open, and it's favicon is quite unique
Click to continue reading "Some of my favorite Firefox extensions"
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What to look forward to in Firefox 3.6

- Image via Wikipedia
With Firefox 3.5 released yesterday, talk is already active on the next release from Mozilla.
According to a post on Mashable, the next update (aka Firefox.next and Namoroka) will feature better performance ("dramatic, human-perceivable speed increases"), more personalization and customization options, new navigation options, better web app support, and many other features that may also be considered.
Want to read more? Check out the original post on Mashable.

