Mozilla unveils "cognitive shield" new tab concept for Firefox
When you open a new tab in Firefox 3.0 you see a blank page. Mozilla has been working on ways to make that page more useful for a few weeks now. Mozilla isn't the first company to rethink the blank window. Opera has offered a "speed dial" feature with user-customizable thumbnails for your favorite web sites for a while. And Google Chrome automatically generates thumbnails from your most frequently visited pages.
But Mozilla doesn't just want to give you quick access to the sites you visit most. The team also wants to make sure the new tab area isn't too distracting. And that's led to a completely new concept that the developers are calling a "cognitive shield."
What happens is that Firefox will keep track of your recently and frequently visited pages. But instead of showing you a list of links or thumbnails every time you open a new tab, Firefox will show you a dull gray set of icons for those pages. If you type an address or search term into the location bar, you'll never see anything other than this unremarkable list of icons. But if you scroll your mouse over the page it will expand into a colorful list of web sites and favicons.
Unlike Opera's speed dial, the Firefox bookmarks are automatically generated. But unlike Google Chrome's thumbnails, you can add or remove links from the Firefox new tab page. You can also disable this behavior by clicking the asterisk in the bottom left corner of the screen.
In order to try out this concept design, you'll need to have the most recent beta version of Firefox 3.1 and then you can download and install the New Tab prototype add-on. Eventually this feature or one very much like it could find its way into a future version of Firefox.
But Mozilla doesn't just want to give you quick access to the sites you visit most. The team also wants to make sure the new tab area isn't too distracting. And that's led to a completely new concept that the developers are calling a "cognitive shield."
What happens is that Firefox will keep track of your recently and frequently visited pages. But instead of showing you a list of links or thumbnails every time you open a new tab, Firefox will show you a dull gray set of icons for those pages. If you type an address or search term into the location bar, you'll never see anything other than this unremarkable list of icons. But if you scroll your mouse over the page it will expand into a colorful list of web sites and favicons.
Unlike Opera's speed dial, the Firefox bookmarks are automatically generated. But unlike Google Chrome's thumbnails, you can add or remove links from the Firefox new tab page. You can also disable this behavior by clicking the asterisk in the bottom left corner of the screen.
In order to try out this concept design, you'll need to have the most recent beta version of Firefox 3.1 and then you can download and install the New Tab prototype add-on. Eventually this feature or one very much like it could find its way into a future version of Firefox.













Comments
9
Subscribe to commentsTomMar 23rd 2009 7:10PM
I don't want to be negative because I love FireFox, but it sounds like more memory drain. These features are great and I have found that I can't live without the add-ons, but I want the browser to be more nimble.
And I like displaying the most visited sites a la Chrome.
DuncanMar 23rd 2009 8:23PM
This just seems like change for the sake of it, for me it would just be an irritation and as Tom said, a memory drain.
sniping_dreamerMar 23rd 2009 8:31PM
I've been doing this with Speed Dial Extension, combined with Tab Mix Plus. Just drag the Speed Dial tab to the Home page. Then set Tab Mix Plus to "Load Home Page" on new tabs. Voila.
DeoWulfMar 23rd 2009 10:29PM
Although I can add and remove sites, it never saves it for the next time I open a tab. Dunno what the problem is.
Anyways, I like it, although before reading this I didn't see what the point of the rollover was.
dfgdfgdfgMar 24th 2009 8:13AM
I love my about:blank.
scapeMar 24th 2009 9:12AM
I can't get my head around why more people don't use Opera to begin with...
Crazy SerbMar 24th 2009 11:01AM
And I can't get my head around the fact that Mozilla developers are focusing on all these gizmos and fancy addons to the browser, instead of focusing on trimming off all the unnecessary memory draining features just so I don't have to restart the new 3.1 (or 3.5) every hour or two because it becomes too much of a drain on system resources on certain machines after a while...
Haven't they heard of that good ol' saying "Less is more..."?
I'd give up all those fancy features for an option to turn them all off and run Firefox in some "Slim" mode or something, under the same system resources required to run Chrome.
MKMar 25th 2009 8:12AM
I have always wish Opera could generate speed dial based on frequently accessed page, and Chrome to allow add/delete. But if Firefox keeps crashing on me, I guess I'll stick with Opera and Chrome =)
shellyMar 31st 2009 7:41AM
I like my newtabking firefox extension when it comes to bringing me my most used sites when I ctrl+T. I wish it could be strongly tied to FF itself