![]() ScoopInstaller/Nonportable: □ Scoop bucket for non-portable applications. We need your input! Help us enhance your Mozilla support experience and shape the future of our site by joining our user research study.Įxcept where noted, everything here applies to both Firefox 114 and the Firefox 102.12 ESR.The WebsiteFilter policy has been updated to allow setting the Block list and Exceptions via JSON.This will be available via an updated GPO entry. The Preferences policy has been updated to allow setting the new preference _rsa_pss_support. The SecurityDevices policy has been updated to support deleting security devices.įirefox 115 is the next ESR and will be released on July 4, 2023.This preference allows configuring RSA-PSS support for client certificates. Going forward, we will only be backporting security fixes to the Firefox 102 ESR. If you use the ESR, we strongly recommend that you start testing with Firefox Beta to see if there are any issues you have with the new ESR. There are three more planned releases of Firefox 102 ESR, and then it will go out of support on September 26, 2023. Users will then be automatically upgraded to the Firefox 115 ESR. If you need to prevent upgrades for any reason, you can use the new AppUpdatePin policy. We are ending support for Windows 7, 8 and 8.1. Users of Firefox on these versions of Windows will be moved over the Firefox 115 ESR and will be supported until September 26, 2024. We are ending support for macOS 10.12, 10.13 and 10.14. ![]() Users of Firefox on these versions of macOS will be moved over the Firefox 115 ESR and will be supported until September 26, 2024.I’m not in any hurry to get new versions of Firefox! I’m still on 85.0 here, and that’s fine by me. I’ll get something newer when it comes down the pike. ![]() One of my growing list of criticisms of Mozilla is that they utterly refuse to allow their official build of Firefox to play nice with the KDE Plasma desktop. Every Chromium derivative I have seen runs with KDE perfectly right out of the box with no muss and no fuss, but not Firefox. In order to get the same level of integration with Firefox, I have to use the OpenSUSE edition, which uses the patch OpenSUSE itself created and maintained to make Firefox work with KDE like Chromium does. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |