• cm0002@lemmy.worldOP
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    2 days ago

    Heh, I warn about Mozilla/Firefox all the time and get the same. I hope I’m wrong though :(

    • rottingleaf@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      Everything was clear about Mozilla the moment they started fighting the ecosystem around Gecko, with alternative browsers, useful extensions and so on. And, of course, the old usable UI.

      People just forget what they don’t know how to process.

      • scratchee@feddit.uk
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        1 day ago

        Disagree, XUL was a dead end that either needed shooting behind the bike shed or it’d have taken Mozilla down with it inevitably. It froze their internal architecture to a design that didn’t care about multicore or modern security. Switching to a proper extension api (it didn’t matter if it was chromes or their own, only that they are willing to make their own decisions, like in manifest v3).

        That said, I suspect the real death blow was when they killed servo, that project was their distant salvation, a chance to genuinely outcompete technologically and direct where browsers need to go next. I too hope I’m wrong and they can figure out a path forward, but they’ve shown little ambition from the top, so I’m not holding my breath.

        Edit: you could argue that the solution to XUL should have been an upgrade to modern design rather than death, but that would have just been an expensive temporary reprieve, the world doesn’t stop changing, it was always going to be slow to correct to whatever direction they needed to go next (and meanwhile every extension dev would be screaming murder every time they killed some braindead api designed 20 years ago).

        • rottingleaf@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          XUL itself - of course.

          Edit: you could argue that the solution to XUL should have been an upgrade to modern design rather than death, but that would have just been an expensive temporary reprieve, the world doesn’t stop changing,

          I’m not sure what do you mean by that. No deep customization at all is, of course, easier to support than some.

          I don’t care about preserving the feel of XUL, or any aesthetics, but I do care about its role.

          It’s not about specific extensions and specific language. It’s about the “before” allowing things like Conkeror and any kind of appearance change conceivable and the “after” - not, if we don’t count stupid CSS that breaks with every update.