This could be a neat idea, but adding yet another kind of "history" database or UI to Firefox should be very low priority until it has one that stores and can present history in the plain English meaning of the word, which is "list of past events in chronological order". Imagine your hypothetical ba...| connect.mozilla.org
Open a web browser and you step into a garden of forking paths — where news, messages, memes, work, learning and cat videos all compete for your attentio| blog.mozilla.org
If you’ve ever had more tabs open than you can count, you know the struggle: tiny, unreadable tab titles, constant scrolling, and that moment of panic wh| blog.mozilla.org
A new way to handle dates and times is being added to JavaScript. Let's take a look at Temporal, what problems it solves, the current state, and what you'll find in the new documentation about it on MDN.| MDN Web Docs
As Mozilla envisions Firefox’s future, we are focused on building a browser that empowers you to choose your own path and gives you the freedom to explor| blog.mozilla.org
Most of the web already supports HTTPS: In fact, 93% of requests made by Firefox are already HTTPS. As a reminder, HTTP over TLS (HTTPS) fixes the security shortcoming of HTTP ...| Mozilla Security Blog
I love JavaScript, but I love rendered HTML much more, so I challenged myself to convert James' client-side JS code to something that rendered HTML. I wanted to do it as quickly and as concisely as possible.| bryanlrobinson.com
HSTS (HTTP Strict Transport Security [1][2]) is a mechanism by which a server can indicate that the browser must use a secure connection when communicating with it. It can be ...| Mozilla Security Blog
Weekly notes 5 — Sniffing and glue| blog.paul.cx
Scheme in the browser: A Hoot of a tale| spritely.institute