Google keeps pushing ahead, drops first version of Chromium 6
Here come the shouts of version jumping, ladies and gentlemen: Google has pushed the Chromium browser to version 6. If you're keeping tabs, the first publicly available version of Google Chrome arrived on September 1, 2008. About a year and a half later, they're 5 versions deep.
It's not as if Google just randomly decides when they want to bump the version number. Google has clearly documented ...
Ars Technica is reporting that versioning support will be implemented in Vista at the file system level, allowing users who have System Protection (enabled by default) running to simply right-click a file to access a "Previous Versions" menu (now I know why Vista's hard drive requirements are so steep). Previous Versions will also monitor backups made of files with Vista-aware backup applications, ...
Out of the box, there's no
way to make two different version of Firefox, or two copies running different user profiles, run at the same time. This
can be a big pain when doing stuff like developing extensions or testing alpha builds, or maybe you just want to have
both your and your roommate's profiles open at once. Of course, there's a workaround. It requires setting the
MOZ_NO_REMOTE environment ...
Whenever a new version of Firefox comes out there's
always some grumblings about it deciding that certain extensions are now incompatible. It seems especially needless
with so minor a version change as 1.5 to 1.5.0.1. The fix is not new but not widely known, so it's worth posting
here: In the address bar type about:config. Use the Filter field to find
app.extensions.version (if it's not present, ...





