Discuss Scratch
- Maximouse
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Scratcher
1000+ posts
Firefox
Firefox is really great. By the way, what is the difference between the standard version and the developer version?I think the default settings are different – Developer Edition enables some developer features that are disabled by default in the normal version. There are also some options that only exist in the developer version, for example loading unsigned extensions.
Last edited by Maximouse (July 2, 2025 13:55:37)
- Mrcomputer1
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Scratcher
500+ posts
Firefox
Developer Edition is also based on the beta version of Firefox, so it receives new features sooner than the standard Firefox version.Firefox is really great. By the way, what is the difference between the standard version and the developer version?I think the default settings are different – Developer Edition enables some developer features that are disabled by default in the normal version. There are also some options that only exist in the developer version, for example loading unsigned extensions.
- everwinner64
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Scratcher
1000+ posts
Firefox
Firefox is really great. By the way, what is the difference between the standard version and the developer version?I think the default settings are different – Developer Edition enables some developer features that are disabled by default in the normal version. There are also some options that only exist in the developer version, for example loading unsigned extensions.
Okay, thanksDeveloper Edition is also based on the beta version of Firefox, so it receives new features sooner than the standard Firefox version.Firefox is really great. By the way, what is the difference between the standard version and the developer version?I think the default settings are different – Developer Edition enables some developer features that are disabled by default in the normal version. There are also some options that only exist in the developer version, for example loading unsigned extensions.
- zaid1442011
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Scratcher
500+ posts
Firefox
(#881)You can do that in regular Firefox.
for example loading unsigned extensions.
- Mrcomputer1
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Scratcher
500+ posts
Firefox
Not really. In regular Firefox and Firefox Beta, you can only load an unsigned extension temporarily (until Firefox is closed). Developer Edition, Nightly and ESR have an option to disable the extension signing requirement for non-temporarily installed extensions.(#881)You can do that in regular Firefox.
for example loading unsigned extensions.
- medians
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Scratcher
1000+ posts
Firefox
hi again
My browser / operating system: MacOS Macintosh X 10.12, Firefox 57.0, Flash 32.0 (release 0)
My browser / operating system: MacOS Macintosh X 10.12, Firefox 72.0, Flash 32.0 (release 0)
My browser / operating system: MacOS Macintosh X 10.12, Firefox 57.0, Flash 32.0 (release 0)
My browser / operating system: MacOS Macintosh X 10.12, Firefox 72.0, Flash 32.0 (release 0)
Last edited by medians (July 10, 2025 13:51:55)
- kip23s
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Scratcher
500+ posts
Firefox
Firefox is cool but laggy i added a theme that makes Firefox look like old Chrome which goes well with the Windows 7 theme and 2013 YouTube theme i have.YouTube crashs regularly My browser / operating system: Windows NT 10.0, Firefox 145.0, Flash 32.0 (release 0)
Last edited by kip23s (Nov. 14, 2025 17:02:25)
- medians
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Scratcher
1000+ posts
Firefox
I have a 2011-2012 YouTube theme :DFirefox is cool but laggy i added a theme that makes Firefox look like old Chrome which goes well with the Windows 7 theme and 2013 YouTube theme i have.YouTube crashs regularly My browser / operating system: Windows NT 10.0, Firefox 145.0, Flash 32.0 (release 0)
- redspacecat
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Scratcher
500+ posts
Firefox
Oh there's a firefox topic
My browser / operating system: Windows NT 10.0, Firefox 145.0, No Flash version detected
My browser / operating system: Windows NT 10.0, Firefox 145.0, No Flash version detected
- medians
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Scratcher
1000+ posts
Firefox
Oh there's a firefox topic:D there's also a Chrome/Chromium topic and a general browsers topic
My browser / operating system: Windows NT 10.0, Firefox 145.0, No Flash version detected
My browser / operating system: Windows 7, Firefox 115.0, No Flash versions detected
My browser / operating system: Windows Vista, Firefox 147.0, No Flash versions detected
- jale3ms
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Scratcher
100+ posts
Firefox
Firefox is the best browser - it's nearly as fast as Chrome, has better tracking prevention features, *cough* doesn't send data to Google *cough* , better dev-tools, and better themes, and tons of customizability. It's better than Chrome. I use Firefox btw.
Firefox is also very under-rated.
Chrome is better for gaming. And my firefox glitches like crazy. Also chatGPT agrees.
- BigNate469
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Scratcher
1000+ posts
Firefox
I would use Firefox more, if
1. There wasn't a weird bug that causes my Raspberry Pi 5 to crash whenever I use it for more than 30 minutes and require that I power cycle it to get it to reboot (the GUI and terminal emulator both break, so I can't reboot it that way)
2. I could download it on my iPad and iPhone (Apple forces other browsers to be rated “17+” on the App Store because of “unrestricted web access”, and I have parental controls)
3. Firefox on ChromeOS wasn't a badly emulated mess designed for tablets that doesn't work well, or Google continued to support hardware graphics acceleration on the Debian Linux environment on Chromebooks
1. There wasn't a weird bug that causes my Raspberry Pi 5 to crash whenever I use it for more than 30 minutes and require that I power cycle it to get it to reboot (the GUI and terminal emulator both break, so I can't reboot it that way)
2. I could download it on my iPad and iPhone (Apple forces other browsers to be rated “17+” on the App Store because of “unrestricted web access”, and I have parental controls)
3. Firefox on ChromeOS wasn't a badly emulated mess designed for tablets that doesn't work well, or Google continued to support hardware graphics acceleration on the Debian Linux environment on Chromebooks
- StudioPangoFan_2000
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Scratcher
500+ posts
Firefox
I would use Firefox more, ifYou can always just get the snap store or flathub and get Firefox from there, or install it as a .deb by searching up “Firefox.deb” on Google. The last way being how I got it, which I do use it on chromeos.
1. There wasn't a weird bug that causes my Raspberry Pi 5 to crash whenever I use it for more than 30 minutes and require that I power cycle it to get it to reboot (the GUI and terminal emulator both break, so I can't reboot it that way)
2. I could download it on my iPad and iPhone (Apple forces other browsers to be rated “17+” on the App Store because of “unrestricted web access”, and I have parental controls)
3. Firefox on ChromeOS wasn't a badly emulated mess designed for tablets that doesn't work well, or Google continued to support hardware graphics acceleration on the Debian Linux environment on Chromebooks










