![]() Betterbird make Thunderbird a faithful upstream. It is clear from Bugzilla that the bug fixes related to migration from 102 to 115 are not complete, so existing users of “102” should refrain from manually updating to 115. Naturally, it will not be automatically updated to 115 (Supernova). My Thunderbird 102.14.0 (en-US) was updated with “Thunderbird 102.15.1 (圆4)” through the automatic update feature. However, since I had disabled the “WebP” function, I was not interested in that topic (Google, etc.). Indeed, today, those patch versions were applied through automatic updates. > /3/mozilla-patches-critical-webp-security-issue-in-firefox-and-thunderbird/#respond Mozilla patches critical WebP security issue in Firefox and Thunderbird (Later I’ll try it in Safari - maybe it works in every browser?) So, although I have no interest in the OneTab extension, I just learned something useful! I hope other people find this trick useful too. ![]() not online)… then dragged the “i” icon from the Chrome toolbar into this Firefox window - and it worked then too! I simply dragged the Firefox “i” icon from the top of this page, into the Chrome window - and this page loaded in Chrome! It worked! Then I tried something just a bit trickier, in the other direction - I first (from a bookmark) loaded into Chrome a page from my local web-development server (i.e. (If you hover over it in Firefox, it says “Show site information” in Chrome, hovering it says “View site information” - that’s the icon I’m talking about.) At the top of both browser windows, at the far-left end of the URL bar, there’s a little icon of the letter “i” in a circle. (I did this on my Mac, but I’m guessing it would work on other platforms too.) I’m reading this article in Firefox, so I opened a new blank window in Chrome. I just tried an interesting little experiment, with a useful result. In the past I’ve just copied and pasted the URL, but (even for just one tab) that is a little tedious. Since I’ve rarely wanted to transfer more than one tab between browsers, I’m not inclined to install another extension just for that - especially one that (according to your description) closed all my tabs in the process. The beta release is mostly for beta and nightly users of Firefox. ![]() LastPass plans to release the WebExtension version next month to make sure that Firefox users that use a release version of the browser can keep on using the add-on and service associated with it. The binary component controls features such as attachments to secure notes, importing and exporting of data, additional encryption at the OS level, importing from Chrome, Opera and Safari password managers, autologoff functionality, login state sharing, copy password or username from vault, copy password from Password Generator, and fingerprint authentication. Any feature requiring the binary component won't work.
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