• @fpslem@lemmy.world
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    1101 year ago

    tab grouping

    Sure, okay.

    vertical tabs

    To each their own.

    profile management

    Whatever, it’s fine.

    and local AI features

    HOLLUP

    • @elliot_crane@lemmy.world
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      1261 year ago

      We’re looking at how we can use local, on-device AI models – i.e., more private – to enhance your browsing experience further. One feature we’re starting with next quarter is AI-generated alt-text for images inserted into PDFs, which makes it more accessible to visually impaired users and people with learning disabilities. The alt text is then processed on your device and saved locally instead of cloud services, ensuring that enhancements like these are done with your privacy in mind.

      IMO if everything’s going to have AI ham fisted into it, this is probably the least shitty way to do so. With Firefox being open source, the code can also be audited to ensure they’re actually keeping their word about it being local-only.

        • @elliot_crane@lemmy.world
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          271 year ago

          With it being local it’s probably a small and limited model. I took a couple courses on machine learning years ago (before it got rebranded as “AI”), and you’d be surprised at how well a basic image recognition model can run on the lowest-spec macbook from 2012.

          • ferret
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            211 year ago

            Tbh the inversion of typical intuition that is LLMs taking orders of magnitudes more memory than computer vision can mess people unfamiliar up on estimates of the hardware required

        • lemmyvore
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          111 year ago

          You only need lots of precessing power to train the models. Using the models can be done on regular hardware.

    • @GregorGizeh@lemmy.zip
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      1 year ago

      While I dislike corporate ai as much as the next guy I am quite interested in open source, local models. If i can run it on my machine, with the absolute certainty that it is my llm, working for my benefit, that’s pretty cool. And not feeding every miniscule detail about me to corporate.

      • @anarchrist@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        171 year ago

        I mean that’s that thing. They’re kind of black boxes so it can be hard to tell what they’re doing, but yeah local hardware is the absolute minimum. I guess places like huggingface are at least working to try and apply some sort of standard measures to the LLM space at least through testing…

        • @grue@lemmy.world
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          151 year ago

          I mean, as long as you can tell it’s not opening up any network connections (e.g. by not giving the process network permission), it’s fine.

          'Course, being built into a web browser might not make that easy…

          • @GregorGizeh@lemmy.zip
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            41 year ago

            Sums up my thoughts nicely. I am by no means able to make sense of the inner workings of an llm anyway, even if I can look at its code. At best i would be able to learn how to tweak its results to my needs or maybe provide it with additional datasets over time.

            I simply trust that an open source model that is able to run offline, and doesnt call home somewhere with telemetry, has been vetted for trustworthiness by far more qualified people than me.

    • @RmDebArc_5@sh.itjust.works
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      81 year ago

      I tried one of their test builds. Seems like the AI part just means the browser can integrate with llamafile (Mozilla’s open source solution for running open source llm’s with just one file on any platform)

  • Vitaly
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    801 year ago

    People that wanted vertical tabs must be really excited

    • FiveMacs
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      421 year ago

      Anything to fill all that absolute wasted space from every website formatting things to fit phones and not desktops. Ultra wide really sucks ass for a lot of things.

      • @grue@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        IMO that’s mostly a window-management problem, not an app layout problem. The point of an ultra wide monitor setup (other than flight sims or something) is to be able to view a bunch of different things side-by-side.

        Edit: speaking of which, now that we’ve come almost full-circle from no tab support, to multiple tabs in the same process, to one process per tab, it seems to me that tabs themselves ought to be part of the window decoration, not the app. I mean, they’re useful for almost everything you might want to have multiples of (editors, file managers, terminals, etc.) so why force every app maker to implement them over and over again?

        • Madis
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          1 year ago

          tabs themselves ought to be part of the window decoration, not the app

          Well, Windows did try that. It sounds cool as an idea, but it also severely limits what the tabs can do, as most programs don’t need tabs that are as advanced as browsers’, and even browsers’ implementations of tabs vary widely.

      • DarkThoughts
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        71 year ago

        To be honest, it’s not just for phones. The wider the monitor, the more I’d need to move my head if a website uses the whole space, instead of keeping it centered. Obviously it shouldn’t be too slim but you can’t really just fill an entire monitor or align your content to the left of the screen anymore nowadays.

        • @stealth_cookies@lemmy.ca
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          81 year ago

          The way tree style tabs worked after they broke it was never very good. Floorp is what to use if you wanted side tabs on Firefox.

          That said I still went back to Vivaldi after trying to use Floorp because of stupid little ux issues like pinned tabs not being protected from closing, and broken session saving.

            • @stealth_cookies@lemmy.ca
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              11 year ago

              The issue is that because they broke the UI customization that allowed for it all the extensions are just a kludge to add a panel to the side without actually getting rid of the top tabs.

    • @evatronic@lemm.ee
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      51 year ago

      I admit, this news has made me add a note to re-download firefox on my work machine…

      • @mke@lemmy.world
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        61 year ago

        That’s unnecessarily dismissive. Unfortunately, even the best extensions have their downsides. Some used a browser that suited their preferences better instead, which is a shame for both Firefox and the user, in my opinion.

        Mozilla recognizes this and is finally taking action to integrate highly requested features into Firefox. Many “who really care” are glad for this, because it is a good thing.

      • Psychadelligoat
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        11 year ago

        What’s extra funny is that those extensions are made by Mozilla already

        At least tab grouping and vert tabs were last I looked

  • @sunbeam60@lemmy.one
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    601 year ago

    This is what Mozilla should have done a LONG time ago - focussed on browser features, ease of use, compatibility and speed. Make a better browser if you want to win a browser war.

    • @tabular@lemmy.world
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      211 year ago

      Maybe they should, but focusing on adding new features endlessly is how we ended up with this state of internet browsers. The most complex app running on a desktop are too big, it’s basically impossible to create a new one. (Yes you can fork but that’s just adding toppings to ice cream). The browser war ends only one way.

      If we break up the do-everything application into significant parts then a healthy “war” can exist. Why does a browser need to play video, you already have an app for that.

      • @sunbeam60@lemmy.one
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        1 year ago

        I definitely don’t want them to continually add more feature cruft. When I said “focussed on features” I simply meant “make sure what they’ve got is second to none”.

    • Fugtig Fisk
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      31 year ago

      Forcing useless features or features that are useless to most users is more or less what windows is doing. Why the double standars?

      Especially when Firefox could have included those features as optional modules (even as preinstalled extensions) that we could simply remove if we dont want them?

      • Kayn
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        11 year ago

        How are they being forced upon you?

        • Fugtig Fisk
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          11 year ago

          They are adding them as features to the browser, making it heavier and slower, instead of adding them as optional extensions so that they are only there for the ones who wish them.

          • lastweakness
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            21 year ago

            Just disable them. It’s not like unused code paths consume resources usually.

          • Kayn
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            11 year ago

            How do you know the features are making the browser slower?

            How are you quantifying the increase in weight?

      • @sunbeam60@lemmy.one
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        01 year ago

        I don’t know how you misread my comment to say that I believed Mozilla should continue to add features.

        • Fugtig Fisk
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          31 year ago

          It might be me and in that case i apologize

          …focussed on browser features, ease of use …

          It just sounds like you think its good that they added all these featueas

            • @sunbeam60@lemmy.one
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              11 year ago

              My apologies. I definitely wasn’t meaning to come across indignant. I guess it’s just one of those things of things sounding perfectly clear in your head and not perfectly clear in the receiver’s ear. Hope you have a good day going forward.

        • Chaotic Entropy
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          1 year ago

          If that’s what you’re trying to express then I kind of feel like you miswrote your comment. You want them to focus on browser features but not continue to add features? You don’t feel like there’s any room for confusion there?

  • @grue@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I want fewer built-in features, not more of them. All of these things should be extensions, not built into the browser core.

    I mean, I’d be perfectly happy for said extensions and more to be shipped by default – it would be good for Firefox to come “batteries included” even with adblocking and such, and that’s most likely the way I would use it. But I just want it to be modular and removable as a matter of principle.

    I remember how monolithic Mozilla SeaMonkey got too top-heavy and forced Mozilla to start over more-or-less from scratch with Phoenix Firebird Firefox, and I want it to stick close to those roots so they don’t have to do it again.

    • Facni
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      121 year ago

      We need modular browsers. It is hard for Mozilla to keep the track to the W3C and all the nonstandard stuff that Google, Microsoft and Apple add to their browsers. If those elements were modules, it would be easier for people to collaborate and for Google and Microsoft to be obligated to add support for other browsers.

      • @grue@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        You’re talking about a modular rendering engine, which is a different thing than what I’m talking about. I’m talking about stripping down the UI until it resembles XUL Runner, then adding the functionality back as extensions.

        You’re not wrong that it’s important for the engine’s code to be organized well for developers’ benefit (and ideally for the engine as a whole to be self-contained – it’d be great if Gecko were as easily-embeddable as Blink), but I’m not so sure that users need to be able to add or remove pieces of it in a way similar to what I’m talking about for UI features.


        More concretely:

        I think Firefox should ship by default with all the functionality it currently has, plus uBlock Origin and some other things. But I want it to be designed such that if you went into the extensions manager and disabled everything, things like tab support, bookmarks, history, and maybe even the address bar and back button would be gone. It would still be capable of fully rendering a web page, though.

        • @xavier666@lemm.ee
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          11 year ago

          If they do that, normies will start yelling that Firefox has removed their beloved features and will immediately download Chrome. I have a strong suspicion that a majority of people don’t use extensions at all.

          • @grue@lemmy.world
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            11 year ago

            Did you miss this part of my previous comment?

            I think Firefox should ship by default with all the functionality it currently has, plus uBlock Origin and some other things.

    • @MonkderDritte@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      They are probably extensions, just like pip, pocket, screenshot upload, languages, search engines, themes, etc.

      Shipped by default, handled like extensions internally but not exposed to the user. You see it in the extension*.json files in your profile folder.

      • @grue@lemmy.world
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        11 year ago

        In that case, I want them exposed just like user-installed extensions, so it’s more obvious how to get rid of them if you want.

  • @micka190@lemmy.world
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    241 year ago

    Profile management

    Fucking finally!

    The fact that you had to use external applications or manually go to an internal Firefox menu to change from to another sucked!

    • @ours@lemmy.world
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      11 year ago

      There’s AI and there’s AI. I really like that Firefox has local models for translating content. Them adding AI that describes images for visually impaired people is pretty cool.

    • @kirk781@discuss.tchncs.de
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      1 year ago

      I do not know why browser makers like Opera or Brave(and now apparently Firefox) is going hey ho over AI. I don’t see a proper benefit of integration of local AI for most people as of now.

      As for vertical tabs, Waterfox got it just now. It is basically a fork of Tree Style Tabs and very basically implemented. I am honestly happy with TST on Firefox and while a native integration might be a bit faster(my browser takes just that few extra seconds to load the right TST panel on my slow laptop), it’ll likely be feature incomplete when compared to TST.

      • @FooBarrington@lemmy.world
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        41 year ago

        It depends. I really liked Mozillas initiative for local translation - much better for data privacy than remote services. But conversational/generative AI, no thank you.

        • @barsoap@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          AI-generated alt-text for images inserted into PDFs

          Sounds more like classification so far. Things like summarising web-pages would be properly generative, LLMs in general could be useful to interrogate your browsing history. Doing feature extraction on it, sorting it into a graph of categories not by links, but concepts could be useful. And heck if a conversational interface falls out of that I’m not exactly opposed, unlike the stuff you see on the net it’s bound to quote its sources, it’s going to tell you right-away that “a cat licking you is trying to see whether you’re fit for consumption” doesn’t come from the gazillion of cat behaviour sites you’ve visited, but reddit. Firefox doesn’t have an incentive to keep you in the AI interface and out of some random webpage.

          • @douglasg14b@lemmy.world
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            01 year ago

            Mozilla actually had a project for that: https://memorycache.ai//

            They just suck at naming things, and unfortunately it’s not getting much of the necessary dev time it needs to get out of the POC stage.

            The biggest thing I want is local only models that use my activity & browsing history as a way for me to recall or contextualize events and information.

    • DarkThoughts
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      11 year ago

      I wish they’d backpedal on the floating tabs too. I still fucking hate them and they never really used them for anything like they said they would. They’re just as shitty as they always have been.

        • DarkThoughts
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          11 year ago

          Hi,

          We bring a modernized and differentiated look to tabs since Firefox 89 in order to create a signature Firefox look and experience. This major redesign will help us enable more use cases and features in the future.

          https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/questions/1338169

          Before this, tabs were clearly separated and were directly connected to the rest of the browser UI, while also using much less space & padding. It was one of the major enshittification updates for Firefox and to this day they have not given us any of those mentioned “use cases and features” that would make use of this redesign.

  • @ClamDrinker@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    If you’re here because of the AI headline, this is important to read.

    We’re looking at how we can use local, on-device AI models – i.e., more private – to enhance your browsing experience further. One feature we’re starting with next quarter is AI-generated alt-text for images inserted into PDFs, which makes it more accessible to visually impaired users and people with learning disabilities.

    They are implementing AI how it should be. Don’t let all the shitty companies blind you to the fact what we call AI has positive sides.

    • @UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      11 year ago

      They are implementing AI how it should be.

      The term is so overused and abused that I’m not clear what they’re even promising. Are they localizing a LLM? Are they providing some kind of very fancy macroing? Are they linking up with ChatGPT somehow or integrating with Co-pilot? There’s no way to tell from the verbage.

      And that’s not even really Mozilla’s fault. It’s just how the term AI can mean anything from “overhyped javascript” to “multi-billion dollar datacenter full of fake Scarlett Johansson voice patterns”.

      • @chrash0@lemmy.world
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        21 year ago

        there are language models that are quite feasible to run locally for easier tasks like this. “local” rules out both ChatGPT and Co-pilot since those models are enormous. AI generally means machine learned neural networks these days, even if a pile of if-else used to pass in the past.

        not sure how they’re going to handle low-resource machines, but as far as AI integrations go this one is rather tame

        • @UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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          -11 year ago

          AI generally means machine learned neural networks these days

          Right, but a neural network traditionally rules out using a single local machine. Hell, we have entire chip architecture that revolves around neural net optimization. I can’t imagine needing that kind of configuration for my internet browser.

          not sure how they’re going to handle low-resource machines

          One of the perks of Firefox is its relative thinness. Chrome was a shameless resource hog even in its best days, and IE wasn’t any better. Do I really want Firefox chewing hundreds of MB of memory so it can… what? Simulate a 600 processor cluster doing weird finger art?

          • @chrash0@lemmy.world
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            01 year ago

            i mean, i’ve worked in neural networks for embedded systems, and it’s definitely possible. i share you skepticism about overhead, but i’ll eat my shoes if it isn’t opt in

    • @AusatKeyboardPremi@lemmy.world
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      11 year ago

      There are a lot of knee jerk reactions in the comments. I hope few of those commenters have read the article or, at the least, your comment.

    • @cley_faye@lemmy.world
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      01 year ago

      Can I dsable all local AI features

      Hopefully

      Or better yet not have that functionality installed?

      Unlikely. Firefox has long been gone down the way of “everything included”. They started bundling extensions and peripheral features into the core of the browser long ago, and despite backlash kept going that way. We’re already in the “I have to disable a lot of stuff when I install Firefox” territory.

  • @priapus@sh.itjust.works
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    1 year ago

    All great changes! I’ve been using Floorp to have vertical tabs, but I’d gladly switch back to Firefox when its implemented. Profiles have always been a great feature, but had a bad user experience, glad to see its being improved.

    Really interested in the local AI. Firefox has been doing interesting work with that recently.

    • Brokkr
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      51 year ago

      Sidebery is a great FF extension that provides vertical tabs, trees, and groups.

      • @priapus@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        I’ve tried a few extensions, but they haven’t felt as integrated as the one’s in Floorp, due to firefox limitations. The main reason I want vertical tabs is to save vertical screen space by removing the horizontal tab bar, which can be done with userchrome.css, but thats inconvenient to do on multiple devices. I appreciate the recommendation though, I haven’t used that one and it looks very powerful.

  • Kokesh
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    31 year ago

    I hope it won’t end up like Chrome. Suddenly my tabs were opening in different weird groups and I couldn’t find anything.

  • @jacktherippah@lemmy.world
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    21 year ago

    That’s all fine and good but Firefox on Android is currently in a sorry state. No per-site process isolation, buggy, can’t keep tabs open, slow, choppy, drains battery. Had to uninstall it on my brand new Galaxy S24+ and my Pixel 6 Pro because it was draining so much battery. When are you going to finally stop ignoring Firefox Android, Mozilla?