

Other changes in Firefox for desktops include better WebGL performance thanks to asynchronous canvas updates, which means that your browser will use your hardware's graphics chip more efficiently better memory management when loading images support for the Web Notifications API, which will let Web updates appear in browser tabs and adding a download progress indicator to the Dock icon on Macs.įirefox for Android 22 doesn't yet have WebRTC or ASM.js support, although "eventually" both will come to the mobile browser, Nightingale said. So fast, he explained, that developers at the gaming company Epic were "jumping up and down," he said.ĭuring a demonstration of ASM.js in May, I saw the code powering a first-person shooter that appeared to render in Firefox nearly as smoothly as native code on a console. "ASM.js plus Emscripten on OdinMonkey is fast," said Nightingale. It's eight million developers who have access to the Web camera, or one of those audio remix tools, online."Īlso enabled in the new Firefox is ASM.js, a Mozilla invention to improve the speed of JavaScript to the point wh ere it almost loads as fast as native code. These were both added in Tuesday's new version of Firefox stable."How is it different fr om Skype misses the point of it," said Nightingale, who nearly bounced with enthusiasm in his seat while talking about WebRTC. It lets you conduct voice and video calling one browser to another via its PeerConnection component, but it also lets you transfer data directly between two browsers thanks to a component called DataChannels. On the surface, WebRTC sounds a lot like Skype. WebRTC is planned for Firefox for Android (download), which also updated Tuesday, but it has yet to be added to the mobile browser. "Plugins are the single largest source of security and stability issues that we see," said Johnathan Nightingale, Mozilla's vice-president of engineering for Firefox. The debut of WebRTC, as the protocol is known, inFirefox 22 (download for Windows | Mac | Linux) is no small potatoes. YEREVAN, June 26./ARKA/.Following the recent introduction of full Web Real-Time Communications to Chrome, Tuesday's update to Firefox makes it the second browser to support the plugin-free protocol, Cnet reported.
