Firefox 6 out today

What do devs think of Mozilla's quickfire release schedule?

Firefox 6 out today
Firefox 6: unofficial version available since Saturday

Firefox 6 has been officially launched today, just eight weeks after Firefox 5 was unveiled. Just like its predecessor, an early-bird version snuck out a few days ahead of schedule and has been unofficially available for download on Mozilla's FTP servers since Saturday.
The newest version is reported to be 20 per cent faster than FF5, and domain names will now be highlighted in the address bar.

Mozilla's rapid release development cycle has been underway for a few months now, and has received a mixed response from developers and users. Some developers find the rapid sequence of new releases makes testing sites more time consuming, others enjoy having new things to explore. Users may be displeased about the extra bother of all the upgrading.

Developer Mike Woloszynowicz tweeted: "Given that #Firefox 5 just came out and now 6 is out on Tuesday, I take it that major version numbers are just a marketing tool for Mozilla". This expresses a common sentiment among users: bewilderment at why they're being prompted to upgrade yet again.

Aaron Gustafson, author of "Adaptive Web Design" told us: "In talking with end users I have found that the accelerated release cycle of Firefox is causing confusion. Many people are surprised when they are asked to upgrade because they feel that they just upgraded to Firefox 5 (or 4 in some cases). I am somewhat concerned that this shift may hurt the Firefox brand in terms of perceived reliability and stability because of the way they engage users in the upgrade process. With Chrome it's behind the scenes, so most users don’t know they’ve been upgraded, but Firefox asks you to download and install the new version. I think they need to find a way to ease the transition for non-geek users in order to retain their good reputation."

For his own purposes, however, the faster release cycle is a plus: "As a developer, I think the accelerated release cycle is good because it gives me new stuff to play with, but I think there are risks. Chrome, for instance, releases new versions at a crazy pace and often introduces new bugs in the process. They usually clear them up pretty quickly, but it makes browser testing fairly complicated as you can’t be sure an error is yours rather than the browser’s. I’m hopeful Firefox doesn’t have the same problem."

How are you enjoying the accelerated release cycle? Let us know in the comments.

4 comments

Comment: 1

Mozilla's new rapid lifecycle is certainly welcome news for all but I agree that their new policy towards release numbers *will* cause confusion.

Someone earlier today said 'I just upgraded to version 5. Should I bother updating to 6 if 7 will be available in a week or two?' (obviously it won't be, however I can understand the sentiment behind this).

I'm concerned that because (as per Chrome), Mozilla are aiming to concurrently work on up to three versions of the browser at once, they're going to rapidly hit FF X/10 before having to either come up with a new 'name' for releases so they can reset the clock to 0 or figure out another approach.

There's really no need for this just yet and I can't quite understand why they'd opt for major release numbers only. Maybe it is just for marketing purposes :(

Comment: 2

These updates are getting ridiculous and annoying, each new version is disabling more of my essential extensions. I'm disabling automatic updates and staying with older versions that continue to work with my extensions.

Comment: 3

I am bit torn I have to confess. On one side I really like that they react to new technologies so fast and constantly improve Firefox. But on the other hand it's a bit difficult to keep up as a user. I bet that even many people whose everyday-business is designing websites din't even notice that there is already a new version of the browser. But regarding to version numbers that won't be a problem anymore since Mozilla will abandon them from now on. I only hope that hints to update Firefox will be more prominent in the future.

Comment: 4

Seems that this should have been a Firefox 5.1 release rather than a full 6. I think they need to slow down and only do a release when they have substantial improvements and changes, and of course to let the extensions developers catch up, all of my useful add-ons become redundant (see tgroff statement above), now whenever an upgrade happens I try to hold off as long as I can so that everything still works.
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