Archive for the 'Firefox' Category

No More Google Browser Sync

Friday, June 13th, 2008

Aw… this was a really useful tool that helped me keep my copies of Firefox on my portable and desktop machine synchronized.

It never made a lot of sense to me that it was a Google offering, but it was there and it just worked… no hassles beyond the occasional credential verification. It always just worked.

Unfortunately, the people who worked on it have moved on and rather than find new people to make it work with Firefox 3 (out next week), Google has decided to discontinue the project. So enjoy it for the rest of the year, because then it’s history.

Mozilla’s Weave project is supposed enable similar sync services, but it’s still in the early stages.
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Why Aren’t My CSS Changes Showing Up in Firefox??

Saturday, August 25th, 2007

Firefox icon

No, this isn’t an “Internet Explorer is crap” article.

This was very frustrating. I was rewriting the CSS for the web site I’ll be opening up later today, doing a first test of the changes in Firefox, and none of the changes were showing up on the page.

Using Firebug and XRAY, the changes weren’t even appearing in the CSS as they reported it.

I started out tweaking the CSS and became more and more confused as the changes I was doing failed to make any impact on the appearance of the page. Once I found that they weren’t being recognized I thought that Firefox must be caching the CSS file and not reloading it… I found an extension to give me a handy “clear cache” button… that didn’t do it… I went into the preferences and cleared the cache by hand… no good.

I tried the page under Safari and it rendered the way I expected it to. I tweaked the CSS and saw the effects of the tweak. That was good news… but why wasn’t Firefox working? I’d never run into this kind of problem with it before.
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XRAY

Friday, August 3rd, 2007

XRAY demo

A very nice new tool called XRAY showed up recently. XRAY works with the Safari, Firefox, Camino and Mozilla web browsers (unfortunately no Opera or Internet Explorer support yet). It helps you examine elements on a web page, bringing up information about their dimensions, inheritance, attributes and styling. Best of all, it requires no installation and it’s free. Just drag its bookmark to your bookmarks bar and click on it when you want to examine a web page.

Thanks very much to Western Civilisation Pty Ltd for sharing this with everyone.
[tags]x-ray, javascript, css, web, bookmarklet[/tags]

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Google Browser Sync for Firefox

Sunday, January 21st, 2007

Firefox logo
I use two computers for development - a portable (MacBook Pro) and a desktop (Mac Pro). It’s helpful having the two different environments, and it’s helpful having a backup in case one of them has a problem. It does open up all sorts of issues about keeping things in sync.

I primarily use Firefox as my development web browser, for reasons I’ll get into in another article. I keep a set of bookmarks in Firefox for all the blogs and web sites I’m working with, as well as other online tools that I use (Google AdSense, Google Analytics, LinkShare…), and Firefox remembers login information for all my accounts.

It’s a pain in the ass duplicating things across instances of Firefox.

Google logo

That’s where Google comes in. Google has provided a free Firefox extension which will synchronize Firefox’s bookmarks, cookies, passwords, history and even open tabs and windows, across instances of Firefox.
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