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Firefox is most popular browser in the World, used by millions of people. It offers great security, privacy, and protection against viruses, spyware, malware, and it can also easily block pop-up windows. The latest version is highly customizable, supports add-ons and extensions, and each browser profile can be configured with different settings.
Firefox 40 Final Minimum System Requirements
What's New in Firefox 42.0 Final Version ?
Last year I wrote about AdBlock Plus’s effect on Firefox’s memory usage. The most important part was the following.
Last week Mozilla developer Cameron McCormack landed patches to fix bug 77999, which was filed more than 14 years ago. These patches enable sharing of CSS-related data — more specifically, they add data structures that share the results of cascading user agent style sheets — and in doing so they entirely fix the second issue, which is the more important of the two.
For example, on the above-mentioned “extreme example” (a.k.a. the Vim Color Scheme Test) memory usage dropped by 3.62 MiB per document. There are 429 documents on that page, which is a total reduction of about 1,550 MiB, reducing memory usage for that page down to about 450 MiB, which is not that much more than when AdBlock Plus is absent. (All these measurements are on a 64-bit build.)
I also did measurements on various other sites and confirmed the consistent saving of ~3.6 MiB per document when AdBlock Plus is enabled. The number of documents varies widely from page to page, so the exact effect depends greatly on workload. (I wanted to test TechCrunch again, but its front page has been significantly changed so it no longer triggers such high memory usage.) For example, for one of my measurements I tried opening the front page and four articles from each of nytimes.com, cnn.com and bbc.co.uk, for a total of 15 tabs. With Cameron’s patches applied Firefox with AdBlock Plus used about 90 MiB less physical memory, which is a reduction of over 10%.
Even when AdBlock Plus is not enabled this change has a moderate benefit. For example, in the Vim Color Scheme Test the memory usage for each document dropped by 0.09 MiB, reducing memory usage by about 40 MiB.
If you want to test this change out yourself, you’ll need a Nightly build of Firefox and a development build of AdBlock Plus. (Older versions of AdBlock Plus don’t work with Nightly due to a recent regression related to JavaScript parsing). In Firefox’s about:memory page you’ll see the reduction in the “style-sets” measurements. You’ll also see a new entry under “layout/rule-processor-cache”, which is the measurement of the newly shared data; it’s usually just a few MiB.
This improvement is on track to make it into Firefox 41, which is scheduled for release on September 22, 2015.
OFFICIAL DOWNLOAD LINK
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AFTER INSTALL FIREFOX, ALSO Download
SpeedyFox (Database Optimizer)
http://www.crystalidea.com/download/speedyfox.exe
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User Experience
- The enhancements to Firefox provide the best possible browsing experience on the Web. The new Firefox smart location bar, affectionately known as the "Awesome Bar," learns as people use it, adapting to user preferences and offering better fitting matches over time.
Performance
- Firefox is built on top of the powerful new Gecko platform, resulting in a safer, easier to use and more personal product.
Security
- Firefox raises the bar for security. The new malware and phishing protection helps protect from viruses, worms, trojans and spyware to keep people safe on the Web.
Customization
- Everyone uses the Web differently, and Firefox lets users customize their browser with more than 5,000 add-ons.
Firefox 40 Final Minimum System Requirements
Windows
Operating Systems
- Windows XP SP2
- Windows Server 2003
- Windows Vista
- Windows 7
- Windows 8
- Windows 8.1
- Windows 10
Recommended Hardware
- Pentium 4 or newer processor that supports SSE2
- 512MB of RAM (1 GB recommended)
- 200MB of hard drive space
Mac
Operating Systems
- Mac OS X 10.6
- Mac OS X 10.7
- Mac OS X 10.8
- Mac OS X 10.9
- Mac OS X 10.10
Recommended Hardware
- Macintosh computer with an Intel x86 processor
- 512 MB of RAM (1 GB or Higher)
- 200 MB hard drive space
Linux
Software Requirements
Please note that Linux distributors may provide packages for your distribution which have different requirements.- Firefox will not run at all without the following libraries or packages:
- GTK+ 2.18 or higher
- GLib 2.22 or higher
- Pango 1.14 or higher
- X.Org 1.0 or higher (1.7 or higher is recommended)
- libstdc++ 4.3 or higher
- For optimal functionality, we recommend the following libraries or packages:
- NetworkManager 0.7 or higher
- DBus 1.0 or higher
- HAL 0.5.8 or higher
- GNOME 2.16 or higher
What's New in Firefox 42.0 Final Version ?
-
Reference: Release notes for Firefox 42.0
https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/42.0/releasenotes/
Reference: Release notes for Firefox 42.0
https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/42.0/releasenotes/
https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/42.0/releasenotes/
What’s New /Release Log /New Features
Firefox 41 will use less memory when running AdBlock Plus
Last year I wrote about AdBlock Plus’s effect on Firefox’s memory usage. The most important part was the following.
First, there’s a constant overhead just from enabling ABP of something like 60–70 MiB. […] This appears to be mostly due to additional JavaScript memory usage, though there’s also some due to extra layout memory.(This description was imprecise; the overhead is actually per document, which includes both top-level documents in a tab and documents in iframes.)
Second, there’s an overhead of about 4 MiB per iframe, which is mostly due to ABP injecting a giant stylesheet into every iframe. Many pages have multiple iframes, so this can add up quickly. For example, if I load TechCrunch and roll over the social buttons on every story […], without ABP, Firefox uses about 194 MiB of physical memory. With ABP, that number more than doubles, to 417 MiB.
An even more extreme example is this page, which contains over 400 iframes. Without ABP, Firefox uses about 370 MiB. With ABP, that number jumps to 1960 MiB.
Last week Mozilla developer Cameron McCormack landed patches to fix bug 77999, which was filed more than 14 years ago. These patches enable sharing of CSS-related data — more specifically, they add data structures that share the results of cascading user agent style sheets — and in doing so they entirely fix the second issue, which is the more important of the two.
For example, on the above-mentioned “extreme example” (a.k.a. the Vim Color Scheme Test) memory usage dropped by 3.62 MiB per document. There are 429 documents on that page, which is a total reduction of about 1,550 MiB, reducing memory usage for that page down to about 450 MiB, which is not that much more than when AdBlock Plus is absent. (All these measurements are on a 64-bit build.)
I also did measurements on various other sites and confirmed the consistent saving of ~3.6 MiB per document when AdBlock Plus is enabled. The number of documents varies widely from page to page, so the exact effect depends greatly on workload. (I wanted to test TechCrunch again, but its front page has been significantly changed so it no longer triggers such high memory usage.) For example, for one of my measurements I tried opening the front page and four articles from each of nytimes.com, cnn.com and bbc.co.uk, for a total of 15 tabs. With Cameron’s patches applied Firefox with AdBlock Plus used about 90 MiB less physical memory, which is a reduction of over 10%.
Even when AdBlock Plus is not enabled this change has a moderate benefit. For example, in the Vim Color Scheme Test the memory usage for each document dropped by 0.09 MiB, reducing memory usage by about 40 MiB.
If you want to test this change out yourself, you’ll need a Nightly build of Firefox and a development build of AdBlock Plus. (Older versions of AdBlock Plus don’t work with Nightly due to a recent regression related to JavaScript parsing). In Firefox’s about:memory page you’ll see the reduction in the “style-sets” measurements. You’ll also see a new entry under “layout/rule-processor-cache”, which is the measurement of the newly shared data; it’s usually just a few MiB.
This improvement is on track to make it into Firefox 41, which is scheduled for release on September 22, 2015.
What’s New
- NEWPrivate Browsing with Tracking Protection blocks certain Web elements that could be used to record your behavior across sites
- NEWControl Center that contains site security and privacy controls
- NEWIndicator added to tabs that play audio with one-click muting
- NEWWebRTC improvements:
- IPV6 support
- Preferences for controlling ICE candidate generation and IP exposure
- Hooks for extensions to allow/deny createOffer/Answer
- Improved ability for applications to monitor and control which devices are used in getUserMedia
- NEWLogin Manager improvements:
- Improved heuristics to save usernames and passwords
- Edit and show all logins in line, Copy/Paste usernames/passwords from the Context menu
- Migration imports your passwords to Firefox from Google Chrome for Windows and Internet Explorer; import anytime from the Login Manager
- CHANGEDImproved performance on interactive websites that trigger a lot of restyles
- HTML5Implemented ES6 Reflect
- HTML5Support ImageBitmap and createImageBitmap()
- HTML5Media Source Extension for HTML5 video available for all sites
- DEVELOPERView HTML source in a tab
- DEVELOPERRemote website debugging over WiFi (no USB cable or ADB needed)
- DEVELOPERAsynchronous call stacks now allow web developers to follow the code flow through setTimeout, DOM event handlers, and Promise handlers.
- DEVELOPERConfigurable Firefox OS Simulator in WebIDE, to simulate reference devices like phones, tablets, even TVs
- DEVELOPERCSS filter presets in the Inspector
- DEVELOPERAbility to save filter presets inside CSS Filter Tooltip
- FIXEDVarious security fixes
Known Issues
- UNRESOLVEDURLs containing a Unicode-format Internationalized Domain Name (IDN) are not redirected properly, leading to a Server Not Found error.
OFFICIAL DOWNLOAD LINK
-
Indonesian Bahasa Indonesia Download for Windows Download for Mac Download for Linux
English (US) English (US) Download for Windows Download for Mac Download for Linux
AFTER INSTALL FIREFOX, ALSO Download
SpeedyFox (Database Optimizer)
http://www.crystalidea.com/download/speedyfox.exe