Looking for a streamlined, super fast mobile browser with next-level privacy features? Firefox Focus automatically erases all your browsing history from the moment you open your browser to the second you close it.

i do know that it available in night and beta but i want to use release/stable version i do some config in firefox and when something happen in certain site i do not want to test if it related to one of my custom setting or a bug in beta/night version


Mobile Firefox


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Adding that extension to my Firefox browser allows me to use the t-mobile website without any problems.Firefox is still in Incognito mode and it still blocks the same tracking cookies at the t-mobile site, just now the site cannot tell that my browser is in incognito mode.

A FF Forum I follow a lot always asks IF a post-er tried in Help/ Troubleshoot Mode (eliminates Extensions, certain Settings) OR with a Test Profile easily created by Profile Mgr ( in RUN: firefox -p )....Give thata shot and IF it works it's an Addon or Setting that is interfering, and the only way to know which one(s) is by starting with whatever worked and adding back Addons or Settings until it breaks. No easy guess here, I think.

So, recently I checked out the firefox nightly version and now they expanding their extension support. So I have added 1Password to my extension collection. But unfortunately, the 1Password extension is not working. So is there any plans to release an extension for firefox mobile?. I'm eagerly waiting for that moment to happen.



Some mobile devices and other narrow screens render pages in a virtual window or viewport, which is usually wider than the screen, and then shrink the rendered result down so it can all be seen at once. Users can then zoom and pan to look more closely at different areas of the page. For example, if a mobile screen has a width of 640px, pages might be rendered with a virtual viewport of 980px, and then it will be shrunk down to fit into the 640px space.

This is done because not all pages are optimized for mobile and break (or at least look bad) when rendered at a small viewport width. This virtual viewport is a way to make non-mobile-optimized sites in general look better on narrow screen devices.

If you want to know what mobile and tablet devices have which viewport widths, there is a comprehensive list of mobile and tablet viewport sizes here. This gives information such as viewport width on portrait and landscape orientation as well as physical screen size, operating system and the pixel density of the device.

I'm trying to access the WebGUI via my mobile phone on Firefox's mobile browser app, but every time I login it loops back to login screen. Weirdly I can access and log into the WebGUI with Google Chrome and Microsoft Edge perfectly fine, but Firefox is my preferred browser but it's not working. I never had any of these problems with OMV 4, however, Firefox mobile was using its old code at the time compared to the current version of Firefox which within the last couple of months the app has been redesigned so it could be that too. It's like something configured on the web server Firefox doesn't like.

I have a GPD Pocket running Ubuntu 16.04 LTS with Unity and Firefox Quantum. The GPD pocket is a small netbook (7 inch display). For some sites I would therefore prefer seeing on this screen the mobile version of the website (mainly on my work's egroupware server).

To keep in touch with the Mobile team on a daily basis, you should hang out on the #mobile channel at irc://irc.mozilla.org/mobile, or #focus at irc://irc.mozilla.org/focus. We're always there, in different timezones. You can read the general Mozilla IRC wiki page for more details about joining IRC.

#mobile and #focus try to be new-contributor friendly. We love it when new folks want to get involved. It's totally reasonable to just sign-on, introduce yourself, and listen to the chatter. And always ask your questions! But be patient: folks are busy and you might need repeat your question, or come online at different times of day, to get feedback.

For the latest developments, updates, pro-tips and happenings in the world of Firefox on Android, you should follow @FennecNightly on Twitter. You can also read our development blogs on planet mobile.

I am using Firefox Sync to synchronise bookmarks between my (Ubuntu) desktop client and (Android) mobile client. The bookmarks are synched, but kept in separate folders, rather than together. On the desktop client I have:

AFAIK, there's no way to do quite that, but there's a workaround that gets something close.On your desktop, press ctrl+Shift+B to show all browsers. Then click on "Bookmark Menu" or "Bookmark Toolbar" and then copy and paste the bookmarks from that folder into "mobile bookmarks". (You'll obviously want to use select all to speed this up.) Sync the browsers and voila!

The initial version of Firefox for Android was codenamed Fennec and branded Firefox for mobile;[12] it initially supported Maemo and Android before supporting MeeGo[13] and Firefox OS as well. Support for Maemo was later dropped. In 2020, a redesigned version of Firefox for Android (codenamed Fenix, and also branded as Firefox Daylight) was released, which introduced a new internal architecture and user interface inspired by Firefox Focus, new privacy features, and switching to curated WebExtensions for add-ons.

Firefox for mobile, codenamed "Fennec", was first released for Maemo in January 2010 with version 1.0[14] and for Android in March 2011 with version 4.0.[1] Support for Maemo was discontinued after version 7, released in September 2011.[15] The codename Fennec comes from the fennec fox, a small desert fox (just as the Fennec browser is a small version of the Firefox desktop browser). Firefox for Maemo Beta 5, released in 2009, was the first version to have the official Firefox branding, with the Firefox name and logo.[16]

Firefox mobile was available for MeeGo through the third-party OpenRepos repository.[36] For operating systems not supported by Fennec, like Sailfish OS (based on Mer project), web browsers can use embedlite (IPCLiteAPI), a lightweight embedding API.[37]

Compared to the stock Android browser and Chrome on Android, Firefox has a small market share; for the month of November 2015, Firefox for Android usage share of all mobile/tablet browsers was just 0.81%.[58] Despite that, Firefox for Android enjoys a high Play Store rating, has over 100 million downloads,[59][60] and continues to be developed. The latest version supports Android 4.0 and higher (as Android 2.3 support was dropped in version 48).[61]

A number of devices run older versions of Android.[69] Some would not be upgraded to newer versions because of insufficient technical knowledge by users, or their lack of access to mobile data; some devices cannot be upgraded because of low system resources, or the manufacturer and telecoms operator have failed to provide an update.[citation needed]

On 30 June 2015, The Guardian Project announced a stable alpha of Orfox, the new mobile counterpart of the Tor Browser. Orfox is built from Fennec (Firefox for Android) code and the Tor Browser code repository, and is given security hardening patches by the Tor Browser development team. Some of the Orfox build work is based on the Fennec F-Droid project.[77]

For questions about site appearance and functionality on the mobile version of Firefox. Note that this browser is not officially supported by Stack Exchange and so bug reports with it will not be fixed. (See also: the [firefox] tag.)

Your mobile Firefox looks a lot different than my mobile Firefox, probably due to different screen resolutions. It would be useful to know your screen resolution in order to diagnose the problem, since responsive designs work based on the size in px of the area they have to work with.

The latest versions of 115 have problems with displaying text. When expanding, narrowing the screen, part of the text disappears arbitrarily, both in mobile and in PC display. I downloaded an older ve...

In the unzipped directory of your extension, run web-ext run -t firefox-android and follow the instructions on screen to make sure you select the right device. Select org.mozilla.fenix as the apkname (or org.mozilla.firefox_beta for Firefox Beta for Android).

I've been working on a responsive website that implements a common mobile navigation design convention: using position:fixed; to overlay a nav bar on top of the document so that the content scrolls beneath it.

So far it works great in every single mobile browser in iOS (chrome and safari). However when I tested the site on my Android Nexus 4 device (I tested the website in both Chrome and firefox) the navigation bar displays some weird behavior. When I scroll the navigation stays fixed but does not shift upward as the browser's address bar disappears. Rather it waits for you to stop touching/scrolling and then it awkwardly snaps the navigation to its right position. This bug is more prominent in Chrome. I'm so confused as to why this is happening. ff782bc1db

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