Firefox 134 Available With Experimental HTML "autocorrect" Attribute

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  • sophisticles
    Senior Member
    • Dec 2015
    • 2622

    #21
    Firefox 134 also now follows the model HTML specification for transient user activation more accurately. This change will make pop-up blocking kless strict in cases where Firefox was previously overly-aggressive.

    Firefox 134 also brings experimental support for the HTML "autocorrect" attribute. The HTML autocorrect attribute can be used on editable text elements aside from password/email/URL fields fur allowing automatic correcting of spelling and/or punctuation errors. This relies on underlying native support for spelling/punctuation handling while this autocorrect attribute can allow web developers to specify whether this auto-correction behavior should be applied to a given from or HTML field.
    Autocorrect for the win.

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    • klapaucius
      Senior Member
      • Mar 2015
      • 164

      #22
      You missed one right at the end

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      • sophisticles
        Senior Member
        • Dec 2015
        • 2622

        #23
        Originally posted by schmidtbag View Post
        I don't really understand why people care that much about CPU decode. It takes a real crappy CPU to struggle at decoding 4K @ 60FPS.
        My Ice Lake based laptop 4C/8T can't play back 4k60p HEVC via CPU smoothly.

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        • Jabberwocky
          Senior Member
          • Aug 2011
          • 1214

          #24
          I'm I reading this correctly? 0 New features, 0​ fixes for Linux Desktop in a major release.
          Originally posted by Jaxad0127 View Post

          The touchpad hold gesture is new for Linux.
          For Linux Desktop

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          • Jabberwocky
            Senior Member
            • Aug 2011
            • 1214

            #25
            Originally posted by oibaf View Post

            The full release notes will be published tomorrow, the current one is temporary for the beta version. There could be something else added to release notes tomorrow.
            This makes more sense, I was wondering why it wasn't showing on the official page. Thanks.

            +1 to johnp117 too

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            • ezst036
              Senior Member
              • Feb 2018
              • 683

              #26
              Originally posted by schmidtbag View Post
              I don't really understand why people care that much about CPU decode. It takes a real crappy CPU to struggle at decoding 4K @ 60FPS.
              "Crappy CPU" desktop here that I'm working on. I need decode otherwise I can't watch it at that highest setting.

              Also it's more efficient from heat/energy. It's better all around than the CPU way. Especially on laptops where battery life while unplugged is super important.
              Last edited by ezst036; 06 January 2025, 05:16 PM.

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              • anda_skoa
                Senior Member
                • Nov 2013
                • 1225

                #27
                Originally posted by Danny3 View Post
                So screw you suggesting me that I should use the codec with the worse quality and bigger file size or to convert them, which of course will also mean worse quality!
                No, they recommend that you use a Chrome based browser instead.



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                • blackshard
                  Senior Member
                  • Oct 2009
                  • 603

                  #28
                  Originally posted by schmidtbag View Post
                  I don't really understand why people care that much about CPU decode. It takes a real crappy CPU to struggle at decoding 4K @ 60FPS.
                  Simple answer: dedicated hardware does the job with a lot less power and keeps CPU free to do something else.

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                  • oleid
                    Senior Member
                    • Sep 2007
                    • 2544

                    #29
                    Originally posted by blackshard View Post

                    Simple answer: dedicated hardware does the job with a lot less power and keeps CPU free to do something else.
                    Basically the same reason today's APUs come with dedicated AI accelerators.

                    Comment

                    • QwertyChouskie
                      Senior Member
                      • Nov 2017
                      • 638

                      #30
                      Why is no one talking about holding gestures finally working? That's such a big usability improvement on touchpads...

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