Mozilla to rebuild Firefox fundamental parts for first timeJuly 7, 2015 - 14:17 AMT PanARMENIAN.Net - Firefox has been around since 2002 and Mozilla is looking to rebuild fundamental parts of the browser for the first time, The Next Web says. Mozilla’s Director of Engineering, Dave Camp, posted a message to the Mozilla mailing list saying that while Firefox is “built on Web technologies” the company could “do a much better job of capitalizing on it.” The browser’s interface was built on top of Mozilla’s XML User Interface Language (XUL), which was invented to “fill the gaps” that HTML had at the time. According to Camp’s email, because XUL isn’t a Web technology it doesn’t get as much attention as it needs. That means performance problems are left unfixed, as well as creating complexity for Firefox’s rendering engine, Gecko. Camp said that Mozilla “[intends] to move Firefox away from XUL and XBL,” though the discussions have just begun internally. The shift is a big one for Mozilla and could have huge implications for developers of browser extensions and the company itself, and Camp acknowledges answering the big questions is “going to take a while.” In the future, Mozilla will make the most of the same technology to render itself that the Web does, and that’s good for everyone, TNW says. Top stories Yerevan will host the 2024 edition of the World Congress On Information Technology (WCIT). Rustam Badasyan said due to the lack of such regulation, the state budget is deprived of VAT revenues. Krisp’s smart noise suppression tech silences ambient sounds and isolates your voice for calls. Gurgen Khachatryan claimed that the "illegalities have been taking place in 2020." Partner news Most popular in the section | Police try to impede Armenian Church head’s access to war memorial Police tried to stop the supreme head of the Armenian Apostolic Church, Catholicos Karekin II, from visiting a war memorial. Greece says ready to help as Armenia fights flooding consequences Greece is ready to assist Armenia in combatting the consequences of deadly floods in the country’s north. “He will leave”: Protest leader no longer demands meeting with Pashinyan Archbishop Bagrat Galstanyan no longer demands a meeting with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan. Lemkin Institute petition seeks release of Armenians in Azerbaijan The Lemkin Institute is deeply concerned about the continued illegal detention of political prisoners from Karabakh in Azerbaijan. |