Farewell Firefox 4, I hardly knew ye.

Pick your poison.
Many users of the popular Mozilla browser have to wonder if something is amiss when prompted to download Firefox 5, which became available June 21.
Firefox 4 was released only 3 months ago. Version 3 and its various updates lasted three years.
Why the short shelf life for the entirely revamped Firefox 4? Was something terribly wrong with it? Did it have a security hole the size of Bobby Cox’s trophy case?
Nope.
But, since Mozilla is no longer issuing vulnerability patches for version 4 — and hackers seem busier than ever lately — you’d be wise to upgrade to version 5 immediately.
Version 5 feels like version 4.1 to the end user, though there are some under the hood achievements.
Why was Firefox 4’s lifespan so short? Marketing, it seems.
Mozilla, the world’s No. 2 browser behind the Microsoft juggernaut Internet Explorer, is trying to fend of Google’s Chrome browser, which has surged in popularity recently.
Currently, Explorer still lays claim to more than 50 percent of the browser war turf, Firefox about 25 percent, Chrome about 15 percent. Safari, Opera and others divvy up the scraps.
The big, and well-paid, brains at Google release a new version of Chrome every six weeks. Firefox developers hear the footsteps.
From now on, they’ll be releasing a “rapid-release” version every three months. Firefox 6 will be out in September.
Unfortunately, many useful Firefox extensions will fail to keep pace with the development cycle and quit working. And office computer gurus will have to update workers’ browsers a lot more often to keep things secure.
So, keep hitting that update button.
Or, just use Chrome. It loads faster.
Capitalism wins again.
45 comments Add your comment
Sally
June 30th, 2011
2:40 pm
I am keeping version 3.6.18 because I can’t use my fingerprint reader (HP Simplepass) with either versions 4 or 5. Come on, Mozilla — please catch up on your add-on compatibilty.
Rick
July 1st, 2011
6:02 pm
5.0 erased all of my recent Bookmarks when it downloaded, erasing months of research. Only an idiot would write a program that would eliminate someone’s data base.
NA
July 3rd, 2011
4:39 pm
Or they sold you down the river like Google and MS. Here is a novel approach; just cut back on computer time.
grayceworks
July 3rd, 2011
6:44 pm
I had HUGE memory leak issues with FF4. My browser was crashing up to 10 times a day. It would suddenly be taking more than 2 or 3GB of memory and then crash. There were previously only minor memory issues with FF3.6…. But since upgrading to FF5, I haven’t had a single crash and even with multiple tabs and windows open, it’s keeping steady at under 1GB of memory. It may not look different from 4, but it’s definitely more stable.
I'm so Kahnfused
July 8th, 2011
5:03 am
5 is an improvement on that front no doubt grayce . I haven’t had any life changing drama over moving to FF 5 .
As far as people ccomplaining about addons … I lost access to 2 addons when I moved to FF 5 ( out of a mountain stuck all over my browser ) IF I actually cared about those two I lost instructions are all over the Internet telling people how to deal with compatibility issues
Anyone CAN use “out of date” addons with ANY version of Firefox … 5 included … it simply isn’t recommended because they MIGHT be a security risk . It doesnt take a computer science degree to fix that “issue” . The biggest hurdle for most people is getting off their lazy azzes and searching for any of the ten thousand places that explains how to do it and then taking the whopping 3 minutes out of their “busy” lives to read ( and implement) the instructions …