Engine competition is the heart of meaningful browser choice. Mozilla is able to ship Gecko in their browser on Android, ChromeOS, Windows, Linux, and MacOS because those OSes aren't fundamentally anti-web.
— Alex Russell (@slightlylate) August 25, 2020
iOS, OTOH...https://t.co/Nlfql8ItyP
I am pretty excited that the project we've been working on the past two years is now becoming Mozilla's flagship Android browser.https://t.co/v0Q8bRqSPv
— Stefan Arentz ? ? ?? (@satefan) August 25, 2020
The Mozilla Blog: Fast, personalized and private by design on all platforms: introducing a new Firefox for Android experience https://t.co/i4wZeE5A5Q
— Planet Mozilla (@planetmozilla) August 25, 2020
Firefox for Android Gets Big Redesign, New Browser Engine.https://t.co/fG52pE8GoH
— Droid Life (@droid_life) August 25, 2020
Here are 5 reasons to try Mozilla's overhauled Firefox Daylight browser for Android: extensions, security, privacy, tab collections and a way to counterbalance Google's enormous power charting the future of the web. https://t.co/znhl51xU6Z
— Stephen Shankland (@stshank) August 25, 2020
The new Firefox for Android launches today. But will its privacy and UI tweaks be enough for people to shift from Google's Chrome? https://t.co/NIIBDOBYaW
— WIRED UK (@WiredUK) August 25, 2020
The new @firefox for @android brings:
— Emil Protalinski (@EPro) August 25, 2020
- Enhanced Tracking Protection on by default
- Organize tabs into Collections
- Private Browsing in one tap
- Top or bottom navigation bar
- Light or Dark themes
- GeckoView engine https://t.co/ufCSqfRnzp
New Firefox for Android launches with souped-up privacy tools and a bottom address bar (story by @Indianidle) https://t.co/RyInCyer50
— TNW (@thenextweb) August 25, 2020