That’s a big change from the two years it took to move from Firefox 3.5 to Firefox 4. Firefox 5 is part of Mozilla’s new rapid release development cycle. This cycle, which is more akin to what Google does with its Chrome browser, promises faster, more iterative updates. With any luck, Mozilla expects Firefox to hit version 7 by the end of the year.
Visually, Firefox 5 looks identical to Firefox 4. Everything we said in our Firefox 4 review applies to this release.
Rather than reinventing the wheel, Mozilla has added better support for web standards, fixed some bugs, made performance enhancements and added a few additional code touches.
The big new features, courtesy of the release notes include:
- Support for CSS animations
- Better visibility for the Do-Not-Track header preference
- Improved canvas and JavaScript support
- Better standards support for canvas, HTML5, XHR, MathML and SMIL
- Better tuned HTTP idle connection logic
In my tests, Firefox 5 is fast — even faster than Firefox 4. I also love the more frequent update cycle, because it means that the browser will be more able to support the latest and greatest browser features.
To update to the latest Firefox, click on the “check for updates” button in the “About Firefox” menu. In the comments, let me know your thoughts of the new Firefox and its more frequent release cycle.
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