I'm not a system administrator, and I don't even play one on TV. I'm just a long-time Firefox user who was forced to switch to the ESR channel because of intense dislike of the new "normal channel" Firefox release. I don't understand why Firefox had to essentially mimic the Chrome UI, which does not support how I want to use my computer browser.
Now it seems from the messages on this listserve that the forthcoming ESR release next year will probably adopt the same ADD-friendly regular Firefox/Chrome UI, and I'll be left without a useful browser. Depressing. I don't know if my feelings are shared by anyone else, but I did want to put them out there: not everybody wants their computer browser to work like a smart phone browser. Thanks for listening, Fred Bauer ________________________________ From: Enterprise <enterprise-boun...@mozilla.org> on behalf of Sylvestre Ledru <sylves...@mozilla.com> Sent: Wednesday, December 20, 2017 5:06 AM To: enterprise@mozilla.org Subject: [Mozilla Enterprise] Announcing the next Extended Support Release of Firefox - ESR60 with policy engine The Firefox ESR (extended support release) is based on an official release of Firefox desktop for use by organizations including schools, universities, businesses and others who need extended support for mass deployments. Since Firefox 10, ESR has grown in popularity and many large organizations rely on it to let their employees browse the Internet securely. We want to make customization of Firefox deployments simpler for system administrators and we’re pleased to announce that our next ESR version, Firefox 60, will include a policy engine that increases customization possibilities and integration into existing management systems. What is the policy engine? The Policy Engine is a project to build a Firefox desktop configuration and customization feature for enterprise users. The policy engine will work with any tool that wants to set policies and we intend to bring Windows Group Policy support soon. We’ll be initially supporting a limited set of policies but this will be evolving through user feedback. More details on the policy engine can be found here.<https://wiki.mozilla.org/Firefox/EnterprisePolicies> Bug reference<https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1419102> What’s the plan? In order to accommodate the group policy implementation, we are making Firefox 60 our next ESR version and will be following this plan: * May 8th - ESR 60.0 released (we’d love feedback from early adopters at that point and will be sharing a feedback form through the enterprise mailing list) * July 3rd - ESR 60.1 released * August 28th - End of life for ESR 52 and release of ESR 60.2.0. No further updates will be offered for ESR52 and an update to ESR60.0.2 will be provided through the application update service Also please keep in mind that Firefox 57, released last month, supports only add-ons built with the WebExtensions API<https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/Add-ons/WebExtensions>. This means that Firefox 52 ESR is the last release that will support legacy add-ons. If you developed an add-on that has not been updated to the WebExtensions API, there is still time to do so. Documentation<https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/Add-ons/WebExtensions/Porting_a_legacy_Firefox_add-on> is available, and you can ask questions by emailing dev-add...@mozilla.org<mailto:dev-add...@mozilla.org> or joining the #webextensions channel at irc.mozilla.org<http://irc.mozilla.org>. If you are supporting users who use add-ons, now is a good time to encourage them to check if their add-on works<https://support.mozilla.org/en-US/kb/frequently-asked-questions-firefox-addon> with Firefox 57+. Erin, Felipe, Jeff, Kev, Mike Kaply, Romain, Shell & Sylvestre
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