With today’s release of Firefox, we are the first browser to support WebAssembly. If you haven’t yet heard of WebAssembly, it’s an emerging standard inspired by our research to enable near-native performance for web applications. WebAssembly is one of the biggest advances to the Web Platform over the past decade. This new standard will enable amazing video games and high-performance web apps for t
WebAssembly is a new, cross-browser format for programs on the Web. You can read all about it in Lin Clark‘s six-part series, A cartoon intro to WebAssembly. Unlike JavaScript, WebAssembly is a binary format, which means developers need new tools to help understand and experiment with WebAssembly. One such tool is Mozilla’s WebAssembly Explorer. The video below demonstrates the basic functions of
v 11.4.29 ============================================================ x [nscl] Updated TLDs x [nscl] Improved reliability of TLD updater x Removed theme.js console noise x Fix beta channel updates breakage due to browser_specific_settings override x [nscl] Several content-side performance improvements x Reduce synchronous policy retrieval impact on file: and ftp: document loading performance x Mo
Firefox 52: Introducing WebAssembly, CSS Grid and the Grid Inspector Introduction It is definitely an exciting time in the evolution of the web with the adoption of new standards, performance gains, better features for designers, and new tooling. Firefox 52 represents the fruition of a number of features that have been in progress for several years. While many of these will continue to evolve and
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