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  2. Firefox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Firefox

    Firefox 57, which was released in November 2017, was the first version to contain enhancements from Quantum, and has thus been named Firefox Quantum. A Mozilla executive stated that Quantum was the "biggest update" to the browser since version 1.0. [43] [44] [45] Unresponsive and crashing pages only affect other pages loaded within the same ...

  3. Comparison of browser engines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_browser_engines

    Active. Google. GNU LGPL, BSD-style. Google Chrome and all other Chromium -based browsers, including Microsoft Edge, Brave, Vivaldi, Samsung Internet, and Opera [4] Gecko. Active. Mozilla. Mozilla Public. Firefox browser and Thunderbird email client.

  4. List of Mozilla products - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Mozilla_products

    Mozilla Thunderbird - An email and news client. Mozilla VPN - A virtual private network client. SeaMonkey (formerly Mozilla Application Suite) - An Internet suite. ChatZilla - The IRC component, also available as a Firefox extension. Mozilla Calendar - Originally planned to be a calendar component for the suite; became the base of Mozilla Sunbird.

  5. Mozilla - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mozilla

    Mozilla. Mozilla (stylized as moz://a) is a free software community founded in 1998 by members of Netscape. The Mozilla community uses, develops, publishes and supports Mozilla products, thereby promoting exclusively free software and open standards, with only minor exceptions. [1]

  6. Midori (web browser) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Midori_(web_browser)

    The major points for criticism are the absence of the process isolation, the low number of available extensions [30] and occasional crashes. [citation needed] Nick Veitch from TechRadar included Midori 0.2.2 in his 2010 list of the eight best web browsers for Linux. At that time he rated it as "5/10" and concluded, "while it does perform ...

  7. Pale Moon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pale_Moon

    Pale Moon's default user interface is the one that was used by Firefox from versions 4 to 28, known as Strata. [8] It always runs in single process mode and uses a rendering engine known as Goanna. [9] The browser has its own set of extensions [10] and supports legacy Firefox add-ons built with XUL and XPCOM, [11] [12] which Firefox dropped ...

  8. Vivaldi (web browser) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vivaldi_(web_browser)

    Vivaldi can use many browser extensions developed for Google Chrome and Firefox (they both use the WebExtensions API [41]), and users can install extensions directly from the Chrome Web Store. Most of these work properly in Vivaldi, with the exception of themes specific to Google Chrome due to Vivaldi using a unique backend for rendering the UI ...

  9. Greasemonkey - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greasemonkey

    Greasemonkey. Greasemonkey is a userscript manager made available as a Mozilla Firefox extension. It enables users to install scripts that make on-the-fly changes to web page content after or before the page is loaded in the browser (also known as augmented browsing). The changes made to the web pages are executed every time the page is viewed ...