
Speed

It’s also worth noting that it has integrated a BarTab-like feature into the browser that loads your focused tab first when you restore a session. Then it starts loading the others, so they’re ready when you switch to them. That way, you can get right to browsing and it will load your other tabs as you work on that first page, without crashing under the load of trying to render a million tabs at once.
Minimalistic Interface

It has even saved a bit of horizontal space in the toolbar, moving the reload and stop buttons into your address bar and making it one small condensed button. It might throw you off a bit at first, but it’s really nice to have that clean toolbar.
Tabs, Tabs, Tabs
Mozilla knows you love tabbed browsing, and it shows in Firefox 4. Some of the biggest feature improvements have to do with how you manage your tabs, not the least of which is the great Tab Panorama organisation window. It’s basically a little window that shows a visual layout of your open tabs and lets you organise them by task (or into a handy to-do list). You can even open only one group at a time, so Firefox saves your other groups but doesn’t clutter your tab bar with them. Check out the video above for a demonstration.

As if that weren’t enough, they’ve also added a few other handy features. You can now “pin” tabs like you can in Google Chrome, which sends a tab to the left side of your tab bar as a tiny, favicon-only tab for those sites you keep open all the time (adding also to the minimalistic, space-saving interface mentioned above). You can also search for an open tab in Firefox’s address bar and switch to it, saving you from opening up tabs you already have and making it quicker to jump to them.
Firefox Sync

Other Improvements
Those are some of the biggest additions to Firefox 4, but it’s certainly not all. Firefox is also stepping up its game with support for the WebM video format, full hardware acceleration for better graphics, plugin sandboxing for better crash protection, extra privacy protection, and increased HTML5 and CSS3 support. For the full list of new features, be sure to check out Mozilla’s introduction page, or download it and take it for a spin yourself. And, if you’ve got a favourite new feature, let us know what it is and why in the comments.



















JT
Wednesday, March 23, 2011 at 8:03 AMI have been testing the Beta since they were out. All nice and well, but the option of choosing if you are going to “quit”, “quit and save”, isn’t there any more.
I have changed it so it will always remember my tabs, but that is a pain too.
Stuzz
Wednesday, March 23, 2011 at 10:18 AM“That’s something neither Xmarks and LastPass nor any other browsers (except Safari and the iPhone) currently offer.”
You’ll find that Opera can sync to Opera Mobile . Also, as per your own tests Opera is best in most categories.
Stuzz
Wednesday, March 23, 2011 at 10:43 AM“That’s something neither Xmarks and LastPass nor any other browsers (except Safari and the iPhone) currently offer.”
Opera has done this since December 2009 – http://www.opera.com/press/releases/2009/12/02/