** Description changed:

- Firefox 3.1 is a significant release, in that it provides the following:
+ Firefox 3.1 is a significant release, in that it alreadt provides the
+ following:
  
      * Much lighter memory footprint compared to previous Firefox versions -- 
ties in with next point...
      * Updated JavaScript engine: Tracemonkey. Highly optimized for speed, and 
garbage collection.
      * Fixes many stability issues with Flash, and many annoyances with flash 
video playback are gone.
      * Resistant to random website crashes, including script-heavy ones that 
have been prone to crashing under 3.0.x
      * Highlighting and Dragging text/images/etc actually works -- in previous 
version, selecting large elements such a images or large blocks
        of text was unusable, and frankly, it looked ugly due to the lack of 
anti-aliasing ... all fixed and working smoothly.
      * Ctrl+Tab cycles between browser tabs (With Preview, like a window 
manager.)
+ And, the following features are planned to be implemented before September 9:
+ (source: http://blogs.zdnet.com/open-source/?p=2777)
+     * Bulk tagging, 
+     * Javascript enhancements, 
+     * Cross-site XHR     
+     * Workers threads
  
  If 3.1 were to be accepted, it would likely mean shipping a beta in Intrepid 
Ibex.
  (Though I would like to note further, I reckon it would be an extremely solid 
beta if the pre-beta is anything to judge by. "Reasonable fashion"? It's almost 
indestructible.)
  
  wiki.mozilla.org
        Alpha release criteria
            * Alphas must be generally usable for testing websites and features
            * No significant features broken
            * Major/high value sites should function and display in a 
reasonable fashion 
        Beta release criteria
            * Betas must be stable and usable enough for daily browsing for a 
large number of people
            * Features are fully implemented, if not finalized
            * Most sites should display properly and regression free (from 
previous major release)

** Description changed:

  Firefox 3.1 is a significant release, in that it alreadt provides the
  following:
  
      * Much lighter memory footprint compared to previous Firefox versions -- 
ties in with next point...
      * Updated JavaScript engine: Tracemonkey. Highly optimized for speed, and 
garbage collection.
      * Fixes many stability issues with Flash, and many annoyances with flash 
video playback are gone.
      * Resistant to random website crashes, including script-heavy ones that 
have been prone to crashing under 3.0.x
      * Highlighting and Dragging text/images/etc actually works -- in previous 
version, selecting large elements such a images or large blocks
        of text was unusable, and frankly, it looked ugly due to the lack of 
anti-aliasing ... all fixed and working smoothly.
      * Ctrl+Tab cycles between browser tabs (With Preview, like a window 
manager.)
- And, the following features are planned to be implemented before September 9:
+ And, the following features are planned to be implemented before freeze on 
September 9:
  (source: http://blogs.zdnet.com/open-source/?p=2777)
      * Bulk tagging, 
      * Javascript enhancements, 
      * Cross-site XHR     
      * Workers threads
  
  If 3.1 were to be accepted, it would likely mean shipping a beta in Intrepid 
Ibex.
  (Though I would like to note further, I reckon it would be an extremely solid 
beta if the pre-beta is anything to judge by. "Reasonable fashion"? It's almost 
indestructible.)
  
  wiki.mozilla.org
        Alpha release criteria
            * Alphas must be generally usable for testing websites and features
            * No significant features broken
            * Major/high value sites should function and display in a 
reasonable fashion 
        Beta release criteria
            * Betas must be stable and usable enough for daily browsing for a 
large number of people
            * Features are fully implemented, if not finalized
            * Most sites should display properly and regression free (from 
previous major release)

** Description changed:

  Firefox 3.1 is a significant release, in that it alreadt provides the
  following:
  
      * Much lighter memory footprint compared to previous Firefox versions -- 
ties in with next point...
      * Updated JavaScript engine: Tracemonkey. Highly optimized for speed, and 
garbage collection.
      * Fixes many stability issues with Flash, and many annoyances with flash 
video playback are gone.
      * Resistant to random website crashes, including script-heavy ones that 
have been prone to crashing under 3.0.x
      * Highlighting and Dragging text/images/etc actually works -- in previous 
version, selecting large elements such a images or large blocks
        of text was unusable, and frankly, it looked ugly due to the lack of 
anti-aliasing ... all fixed and working smoothly.
      * Ctrl+Tab cycles between browser tabs (With Preview, like a window 
manager.)
  And, the following features are planned to be implemented before freeze on 
September 9:
  (source: http://blogs.zdnet.com/open-source/?p=2777)
      * Bulk tagging, 
      * Javascript enhancements, 
      * Cross-site XHR     
-     * Workers threads
+     * Workers threads.
  
  If 3.1 were to be accepted, it would likely mean shipping a beta in Intrepid 
Ibex.
  (Though I would like to note further, I reckon it would be an extremely solid 
beta if the pre-beta is anything to judge by. "Reasonable fashion"? It's almost 
indestructible.)
  
  wiki.mozilla.org
        Alpha release criteria
            * Alphas must be generally usable for testing websites and features
            * No significant features broken
            * Major/high value sites should function and display in a 
reasonable fashion 
        Beta release criteria
            * Betas must be stable and usable enough for daily browsing for a 
large number of people
            * Features are fully implemented, if not finalized
            * Most sites should display properly and regression free (from 
previous major release)

** Description changed:

- Firefox 3.1 is a significant release, in that it alreadt provides the
+ Firefox 3.1 is a significant release, in that it already provides the
  following:
  
      * Much lighter memory footprint compared to previous Firefox versions -- 
ties in with next point...
      * Updated JavaScript engine: Tracemonkey. Highly optimized for speed, and 
garbage collection.
      * Fixes many stability issues with Flash, and many annoyances with flash 
video playback are gone.
      * Resistant to random website crashes, including script-heavy ones that 
have been prone to crashing under 3.0.x
      * Highlighting and Dragging text/images/etc actually works -- in previous 
version, selecting large elements such a images or large blocks
        of text was unusable, and frankly, it looked ugly due to the lack of 
anti-aliasing ... all fixed and working smoothly.
      * Ctrl+Tab cycles between browser tabs (With Preview, like a window 
manager.)
  And, the following features are planned to be implemented before freeze on 
September 9:
  (source: http://blogs.zdnet.com/open-source/?p=2777)
      * Bulk tagging, 
      * Javascript enhancements, 
      * Cross-site XHR     
      * Workers threads.
  
  If 3.1 were to be accepted, it would likely mean shipping a beta in Intrepid 
Ibex.
  (Though I would like to note further, I reckon it would be an extremely solid 
beta if the pre-beta is anything to judge by. "Reasonable fashion"? It's almost 
indestructible.)
  
  wiki.mozilla.org
        Alpha release criteria
            * Alphas must be generally usable for testing websites and features
            * No significant features broken
            * Major/high value sites should function and display in a 
reasonable fashion 
        Beta release criteria
            * Betas must be stable and usable enough for daily browsing for a 
large number of people
            * Features are fully implemented, if not finalized
            * Most sites should display properly and regression free (from 
previous major release)

-- 
Firefox Feature-Freeze Exception (for 3.1) -- Intrepid 
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/264851
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