Comments on: Firefox: checking for updates?
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Michael Horowitz is an independent computer consultant and the author of several classes on Defensive Computing. He views Defensive Computing as taking steps, when things are running well, to avoid or minimize the inevitable problems down the road. It's about educating yourself to the level where you can make your own intelligent decisions about keeping your computers and data happy and healthy. If you depend on computers, yet are on your own, without an IT department or nearby nerd, this blog's for you. His personal web site is michaelhorowitz.com.
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- by asadotzler June 25, 2008 4:01 PM PDT
- Michael, our update mechanism has two distinct types of updates, "minor" updates for security and stability fixes that are automatic and pretty aggressive, and "major updates" for new feature versions that are not as automatic or aggressive until the previous major version is EOLed.
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- by mhinnewyork June 26, 2008 8:32 AM PDT
- Please contact me at michaelhorowitz at gmail so that I confirm your identity. Thanks. Michael Horowitz
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(3 Comments)Firefox 1.0 had some pretty serious issues with updating that were fixed by the time we shipped Firefox 1.5 so it wasn't until 1.5 that Firefox could make the "major" updates correctly. You just won't get it in Firefox 1.0.x, and fortunately, the number of people on Firefox 1.0.x is exceedingly tiny.
Firefox 1.5.x users were given minor automatic updates until Firefox 2 had been available for a bit more than 6 months (Mozilla supports older versions with security and stability updates for at least 6 months after the new major feature version ships.) During that time, Firefox 1.5.x users also received several major update notifications urging them to move to Firefox 2, but not until Firefox 2 had received a couple of "minor updates".
Firefox 2.0x users won't receive the major update push until some time after we've shipped our first minor update to Firefox 3 and Firefox 2.0.x users will continue to get stability and security minor updates regularly until about six months from now.
This is good for two things: One, it gives us a chance to fix any issues that we didn't discover with our two million beta testers (there are almost always one or two edge case bugs that you don't discover until you have tens of millions of users.) Two, it gives the add-ons community a couple of months to get all of their add-ons updated and well tested in Firefox 3 before we start "pushing" people into Firefox 3 via automatic updates.
In the mean time, if you want to update to Firefox 3, it's just a download away at http://www.mozilla.com
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