Quantcast
PC World: Technology Advice You Can Trust
Find a Review
Free Newsletters
Receive the latest reviews, how-to's, news, and more.
Weekly Brief
Daily Downloads
Daily Technology News
WiFi Finder
Locate wireless services by a specific address, city, state, country, airport, or zip code.
RSS Feeds
Get our latest content via convenient RSS feeds.
Latest News
Today @ PC World
Become a PCW Member
Join the community and start enjoying the benefits:
  • Get tech advice from thousands of PC World Members
  • Rate and recommend the latest tech products
  • Share your thoughts in blog and article comments
  • Get free excerpts and exclusive discounts on Super Guides
Read More About: LinuxMozilla

Firefox May Scuttle Support for Older Linux

The Mozilla Firefox browser will probably abandon support for older distributions of Linux, a company executive said.

Gregg Keizer, Computerworld

Tuesday, May 15, 2007 4:00 PM PDT
Recommend this story?

Mozilla Corp.'s Firefox browser will probably abandon support for older distributions of Linux, a company executive has said.

Mike Conner, director of Firefox development, has proposed that the browser's next edition work only with more-or-less current Linux runtimes, rather than support aged versions. "We have been building binaries that work across a large range of runtimes and with a fairly aggressive backwards compatibility story," said Conner in a blog entry. "[But] this has resulted in a lot of workarounds and ugly hacks to keep going."

After discussions with representatives from Red Hat Inc., the largest Linux distributor, and Canonical Ltd., which distributes the popular Ubuntu Linux, Conner said Mozilla has come up with new runtime support guidelines for Firefox 3.0.

"Older distros will be able to have build-time support/workarounds as necessary, but Mozilla will not ship or test builds for older platforms," Conner said. "This is still a proposal, but it seems as if everyone is very much on the same page, so I am hoping to make this final in two weeks' time."

Firefox 3.0, which is now in alpha testing -- and will be through July -- is scheduled to launch sometime before the end of the year. The open-source browser currently accounts for 15.4 percent of the global browser market.


Computerworld
For more enterprise computing news, visit Computerworld. Story copyright © 2007 Computerworld Inc. All rights reserved.


Recommend this story?

Comments
Latest News
The One Laptop Per Child Project and Microsoft plan to make both Windows and Linux available on a version of the project's XO... 15-May-2008
Yahoo has responded to investor Carl Icahn's threat to take control of Yahoo's board and force it back to the negotiating... 15-May-2008
Billionaire investor Carl Icahn's proxy fight for Yahoo is aimed at reigniting merger talks between the Internet company and... 15-May-2008
When Apple ships its iPhone 2.0 update--and the accompanying App Store for distributing third-party software for the... 15-May-2008
Amit Singh thought something was missing from OS X. The Google engineer--and author of Mac OS X Internals--took a look at what... 15-May-2008
This week our readers engage on a wide range of topics, from software piracy to capitalism. 15-May-2008
Merger and acquisition news this week from Hewlett-Packard, EDS, Comcast, Plaxo, CBS and CNET -- along with Carl Icahn's... 15-May-2008
The industry momentum for data portability brotherhood hit a bump on Thursday when Facebook blocked Google's Friend Connect... 15-May-2008
The U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC) has voted to investigate complaints by two U.S. companies that 18 other... 15-May-2008
AT&T has begun restricting its sales of Apple's iPhone to one device per customer, according to employees at AT&T... 15-May-2008

PC World's Marketplace

PC World's Free Whitepapers

Name City
Address 1 State Zip
Address 2 E-mail (optional)