Feature Articles
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1st ever MDN Hack Day in NYC
So what’s an MDN Hack Day, you ask? The intention is to host a day of talks, hacks and demos that first introduces the participants to Mozilla and our various open web projects, then invite attendees to shift into participant mode and start hacking. Another Read more…
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Announcing Firefox Aurora 10
We’re happy to announce the availability of Aurora 10. (Download and Test Aurora 10) In additional to the normal improvements that you’ve come to expect like performance, security and bug fixes, Aurora 10 focuses in HTML5 enhancements. New additions HTML5 Visibility API createProcessingInstruction WebGL antialiasing Read more…
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CSS 3D transformations in Firefox Nightly
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Ben Adida on BrowserID and identity
This is the second installment of Mission:Mozilla, a series of interviews that link Mozillians, the technology they produce and the Mozilla mission. Today Ben Adida is in the hot seat to discuss BrowserID, Mozilla’s identity initiative. Tristan Nitot – Hi Ben, can you briefly introduce Read more…
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Introducing Aurora 9
We have just released Aurora 9 (download and test Aurora 9), which is planned to be the upcoming Firefox 9. In it, we have a number of new things that we hope will get you Read more…
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Lights, Camera, Action! July Dev Derby is all about HTML5 Video!
Show off your coolest video hack in July’s Mozilla Dev Derby! Moving pictures have always fascinated people. From the first zoetropes to the multi million dollar blockbusters of today – seeing things move grabs our attention as humans much better than any clever copy or Read more…
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Firefox 4 Demos: Awesome CSS3 Planetarium
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Firefox 4 Beta 2 is here – Welcome CSS3 transitions
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Firefox 4: -moz-any() selector grouping
This is a re-post from David Baron’s blog. This feature has landed in Mozilla Central (trunk) and only available with a Firefox Nightly Build for the time being. Last night I landed support for :-moz-any() selector grouping. This allows providing alternatives between combinators, rather than Read more…
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WebSockets in Firefox
Here’s the pitch for WebSockets: a low-complexity, low-latency, bi-directional communication system that has a pretty simple API for web developers. Let’s break that down, and then talk about if and when we’re going to include it in Firefox: Low-complexity The WebSocket protocol, which is started Read more…
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